When biochemist Jennifer Doudna and her research partner, Emmanuelle Charpentier, published a paper in Science 12 years ago, ...
The technology’s promise can sound like science fiction—it might help us adapt to a radically different climate, or grow ...
UCSB Arts & Lectures and the Cancer Foundation of Santa Barbara host the Nobel Prize–winning biochemist for a talk on CRISPR ...
CRISPR co-creator Jennifer Doudna on watching her groundbreaking gene-editing technology help sickle cell patients: “It’s extraordinary.” Jennifer Doudna codeveloped the revolutionary gene ...
Co-hosted by UC Santa Barbara Arts & Lectures and the Cancer Foundation of Santa Barbara, the talk will discuss CRISPR-Cas9 ...
In this conversation, Doudna breaks down what's next in gene-editing therapy and what's needed to ensure it's accessible to everyone.
Jennifer Doudna says she is an “unlikely success story” because she grew up in a small town with no scientists in her family to speak of. But four years ago, she won a Nobel Prize for her ...
Emmanuelle Charpentier and Jennifer Doudna leveraged CRISPR into a pair of genetic scissors and showed how sharp they are by proving that they can edit any string of DNA this way. Since Emmanuelle ...
We asked one of the technology’s creators, Jennifer Doudna, what comes next. This article was produced for Kavli Prize by Scientific American Custom Media, a division separate from the magazine ...
There’s a certain reader-phobia that scientific biographies can be cumbersome. This one isn’t, writes our critic. This week on Bookstrapping, we have a book about friendly neighbourhood ...
WIRED is where tomorrow is realized. It is the essential source of information and ideas that make sense of a world in constant transformation. The WIRED conversation illuminates how technology is ...