Imagining the Future: World of CRISPR: Editing Genomes and Altering Our Future

When:
October 9, 2019 @ 1:00 pm – 2:00 pm
2019-10-09T13:00:00-07:00
2019-10-09T14:00:00-07:00
Where:
LKSC Berg Hall A-B
291 Campus Drive
Palo Alto
CA 94305
Cost:
Free
Contact:
Ashley Williams
ashleylw@stanford.edu
Imagining the Future: World of CRISPR: Editing Genomes and Altering Our Future @ LKSC Berg Hall A-B

Presenter: Jennifer Doudna, PhD
Professor of Chemistry, Biochemistry & Molecular Biology
Li Ka Shing Chancellor’s Professor in Biomedical and Health
University of California, Berkeley

Gene editing with CRISPR technology is transforming biology. Understanding the underlying chemical mechanisms of RNA-guided DNA and RNA cleavage provides a foundation for both conceptual advances and technology development. I will discuss how bacterial CRISPR adaptive immune systems inspire creation of powerful genome editing tools, enabling advances in both fundamental biology and applications in medicine. I will also discuss the ethical challenges of some of these applications with a focus on what our decisions now might mean for future generations.

As an internationally renowned professor of Chemistry and Molecular and Cell Biology at U.C. Berkeley, Doudna and her colleagues rocked the research world in 2012 by describing a simple way of editing the DNA of any organism using an RNA-guided protein found in bacteria. This technology, called CRISPR-Cas9, has opened the floodgates of possibility for human and non-human applications of gene editing, including assisting researchers in the fight against HIV, sickle cell disease and muscular dystrophy. Doudna is an Investigator with the Howard Hughes Medical Institute and a member of the National Academy of Sciences, the National Academy of Medicine, the National Academy of Inventors and the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. She is also a Foreign Member of the Royal Society, and has received many other honors including the Kavli Prize, the Breakthrough Prize in Life Sciences, the Heineken Prize, the BBVA Foundation Frontiers of Knowledge Award and the Japan Prize. She is the co-author with Sam Sternberg of “A Crack in Creation,” a personal account of her research and the societal and ethical implications of gene editing.

For further information: http://med.stanford.edu/radiology/imagining-the-future.html .