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Gene editing on human embryo used for the first time in the US

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Jennifer Doudna, inventor of the revolutionary gene-editing tool CRISPR, is photographed in the Li Ka Shing Centre on the Campus of the University of California, Berkeley. Photo: The Washington Post

US researchers have successfully carried out gene editing on human embryos using the revolutionary technique known as CRISPR, the first time the procedure has been performed in the US, a report said on Thursday.

“The effort, led by Shoukhrat Mitalipov of Oregon Health and Science University, involved changing the DNA of a large number of one-cell embryos with the gene-editing technique CRISPR, according to people familiar with the scientific results,” the MIT Technology Review said.

But the team behind the work has yet to publish its findings in a scientific journal, and peers said it was too early to judge how successful the results might be.

“The results of this study will be published soon in a scientific journal. Unfortunately we can provide no further information about the work,” Eric Robinson, a spokesman for the OHSU, told the review.

The MIT journal said the experiment appeared to show it was possible to safely and effectively use gene manipulation in embryos to treat hereditary illnesses.

The embryos were only allowed to develop for a few days, the report said.

International experts in the emerging field of gene therapy said it would be hard to assess the results until the Oregon team fully published its findings.

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