"Making your genes CRISPR"
To give audiences a link between the new planetarium show "Cell, Cell,
Cell" and COSI's Life Exhibit, I worked with Dave Buker and the Tech
Studio team to produce a short video on CRISPR.
That's right: CRISPR.
I'm not in charge of naming things in science, unfortunately. It's
short for "Clustered regularly interspaced short palindromic repeats",
which isn't very helpful either, but check this out. When viruses
attack a bacteria, that virus inserts itself into the DNA of the host.
Usually that means Game Over, but some varieties of bacteria have
evolved a clever defense mechanism. They send a special complex
molecule scanning down the path of their DNA, looking for the
virus-laden spot. Once there, another molecule comes in and snip-snips
the virus out. The DNA stitches itself together, and there you go:
healthy bacteria.
Sounds nifty, but what's the big deal? The big deal is that we've been
able to replicate and control this process in the lab. Which means we
can go in and selectively edit out parts of a genome. And with another
trick we can insert new DNA in those snipped-out parts.
CRISPR is cheekily known as a "word processor for DNA", and while
folks are excitedly hyping up the potentially unlimited possibilities,
in the short term the technology will be used for almost entirely
therapeutic reasons, like for treating cancer and gene-related
diseases. Even if that's all we got from the technique, that's a huge
advance.