Rotten tomatoes no more: growing sweeter tomatoes is possible by editing just two of the fruit’s genes. Deleting the genes ...
Today’s mass-produced tomatoes often grow to palm-sized proportions, but their naturally occurring ancestors were far smaller ...
The world produces around 180 million tons of tomatoes each year. Whether they are raw, cooked, or used in sauces, tomatoes ...
I n a groundbreaking study published in the journal Nature, researchers have successfully used gene editing to create sweeter ...
Cas9, cuts any RNA or DNA it recognizes as foreign, and thereby protects bacteria from viral attacks. Another CRISPR system, one that is relatively obscure, protects bacteria in an entirely different ...
Researchers have combined two gene editing methods. This enables them to quickly investigate the significance of many genetic mutations involved in the development and treatment of cancer.
Selection for bigger tomatoes has made the fruits less sweet, but now it has been shown that gene editing can make them ...
Genes contain instructions for making proteins, and a central dogma of biology is that this information flows from DNA to RNA ...
Researchers at ETH Zurich combined two CRISPR-Cas methods to decipher how mutations in a cell’s genome affect its function.
Boston has become one of the top places for biotech research, and one of the big players in this space is CRISPR gene-editing ...
Robert W. Baird analyst Jack Allen has maintained their neutral stance on CRSP stock, giving a Hold rating yesterday. Jack Allen has given his ...