Get your free personalized podcast brief

We scan new podcasts and send you the top 5 insights daily.

Delivering the CRISPR-Cas9 complex into delicate primary human T-cells was a major hurdle. The solution was electroporation, an old technique that uses an electrical current to create temporary pores in the cell membrane, allowing the CRISPR machinery to enter. This non-obvious method unlocked T-cell engineering.

Related Insights

A convergence of DNA sequencing, CRISPR, and AI allows scientists to move beyond just understanding biology to actively intervening. Medicine is now programming cellular behavior by rewriting DNA, representing a "step function" leap in what's achievable for treating disease at its root cause.

A therapeutic approach called "T-cell engagers" or "BiTEs" uses engineered antibodies with two different heads. One side binds to a cancer cell, while the other binds to a nearby T-cell. This effectively brings the killer cell and the target together, leveraging the body's existing immune cells without genetic modification.

Instead of using CRISPR for gene editing (cut and replace), Seek Labs harnesses its natural function. Their platform programs CRISPR to find and 'chop up' viral DNA and RNA, directly lowering the viral load and allowing the host's immune system to take over.

Gene editing pioneer David Liu is developing a platform that could treat multiple, unrelated genetic diseases with a single therapeutic. By editing tRNAs to overcome common nonsense mutations, one therapy could address a wide range of conditions, dramatically increasing scalability and reducing costs.

Early data from an in vivo CAR-T therapy suggests a paradigm shift is possible. By engineering T-cells directly inside the patient with a simple infusion, this approach could eliminate the need for leukapheresis and external manufacturing, completely disrupting the current cell therapy model.

While complex gene editing may be challenging in vivo, Colonia's platform presents a novel opportunity: targeting different immune cell types (e.g., T-cells and NK cells) with distinct payloads in a single treatment. This could create synergistic, multi-pronged attacks on tumors, a paradigm distinct from current ex vivo methods which focus on engineering a single cell type.

While many cell therapies rely on complex genetic engineering with viral vectors, Adaptin Bio manipulates patient T-cells without it. This simpler, non-viral process is a strategic choice to reduce costs, speed up manufacturing, and make the therapy accessible to a broader patient population.

CRISPR's origins lie in basic microbiology. Scientists studying unusual repeating DNA sequences in bacteria discovered they were part of an adaptive immune system. Bacteria use CRISPR to recognize and cut the DNA of invading viruses (bacteriophage), a mechanism that was then repurposed for gene editing.

Patrick Collison believes we can finally cure complex diseases because biology now has a complete 'Turing loop': advanced sequencing to 'read' biological data, neural networks to 'think' about it, and CRISPR to 'write' changes by perturbing cells. This combination provides the necessary toolset for breakthroughs.

Beyond transient RNA, Create has developed a unique retrotransposon based on the human Line-1 element. This technology allows for stable, scarless gene delivery using only RNA, providing an option for durable expression (e.g., for CD19 CAR-T) alongside their transient approaches, creating a highly versatile platform.