News
Jennifer Doudna and her lab manager, Kai Hong, working in her laboratory. Cailey Cotner CRISPR has generated immense excitement because it's fast, cheap and can cut and ...
Weill Cancer Hub West will harness genomics, big data, AI, and machine learning to counter California’s 20 new cancer cases ...
In new book, biochemist Jennifer Doudna envisions a world of woolly mammoths, winged lizards, and unicorns as CRISPR "allows us to bend nature to our will." ...
Doudna and Charpentier, director of the Max Planck Institute for Infection Biology, will share the 10 million Swedish krona (more than $1 million) prize. BREAKING NEWS: The 2020 #NobelPrize in ...
Biochemist Jennifer Doudna received the inaugural Kimberly Prize in Biochemistry and Molecular Genetics at the Robert H. Lurie Medical Research Center on Tuesday. The prize will be awarded ...
Jennifer Doudna, one of the pioneers of the gene-editing technique known as CRISPR, thinks the biotech tool could be an essential one for combating COVID-19 and future pandemics.
Jennifer Doudna and Emmanuelle Charpentier won the Nobel Prize for figuring out how to use biological mechanisms to edit genes, but an ongoing legal battle makes their win complicated.
Jennifer Doudna will be the first to tell you that she didn’t invent CRISPR, but she did help start the CRISPR revolution. In 2012, she was part of a small group of researchers at the University ...
The same life-changing event — receiving a copy of “The Double Helix” — happened early on to Jennifer Doudna, the subject of “The Code Breaker: Jennifer Doudna, Gene Editing and the ...
And Jennifer Doudna –– because of her early work on the structure of RNA, and then her work on CRISPR, and then her involvement in the moral and ethical discussions internationally about using ...
After Jennifer Doudna and other scientists improved the technology known as CRISPR to edit human genomes, a long-awaited, and sometimes feared, milestone arrived. For the first time in human ...
And Jennifer Doudna, a U.C. Berkeley professor, shared the prize in chemistry with Emmanuelle Charpentier, now the director of the Max Planck Unit for the Science of Pathogens in Berlin, ...
Results that may be inaccessible to you are currently showing.
Hide inaccessible results