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Re: GENE THERAPY: Going too Far?

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This is not gene therapy, at least not in the usual sense of the word.   It
is just a continuation of existing work and he's doing it in microbes.
We've been transferring DNA from one microorganism to another for decades.
Many medicines are produced using this sort of technology.

On 6/29/07, Peggy Willocks <dwillocks@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:

It's time to stir up some of those stagnant brain cells. If so moved (and without argument), please respond with your views on this: (Excerpts are listed below - follow the link for the entire article) Peggy

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn...062802046.html

Scientists Report DNA Transplant
Organisms Adopt Donor Traits

By Rick Weiss
Washington Post Staff Writer
Friday, June 29, 2007; Page A03

Scientists said yesterday that they had transplanted a microbe's entire,
tangled mass of DNA into a closely related organism, a delicate operation
that cleanly transformed the recipient from one species into the other.
* * *
"This is equivalent to changing a Macintosh computer into a PC by
inserting
a new piece of [PC] software," said study leader J. Craig Venter, chief
executive of Synthetic Genomics, a Rockville company racing to be the
first
to create fully synthetic, replicating cells.

The success confirms that chromosomes can survive transplantation intact
and
literally rewrite the identity and occupation of the cells they move into.
That is a crucial finding for scientists who hope to make novel life forms
by packing synthetic chromosomes into hollow, laboratory-grown cells.
* * * *
The total identity makeover, described in yesterday's online edition of
the
journal Science, is a modern version of work done in the 1940s, when
Rockefeller University scientists moved DNA from one strain of a bacterial
species to another, causing a change that was passed to its offspring.
That
work is enshrined in history books as the first proof that DNA is the
chemical carrier of genetic information.

Similarly, scientists at Harvard University earlier this month reported
they
had performed "whole genome" transplants from mouse cells into fertilized
mouse eggs, a move that reprogrammed those eggs to behave differently.

But the new work, done at the J. Craig Venter Institute in Rockville, is
the
first in which the entire genetic load from one species has been
transferred
to another species "naked" -- without the cumbersome protein coatings that
usually envelop DNA and can get in scientists' way.

Moreover, the size of the transplanted genome, about 1 million genetic
letters, or "bases," is large. That offers hope that complicated genetic
programs requiring lots of DNA code will be transplantable.
* * * *
The organisms he is working with do not cause disease, he said, and could
be
modified so they cannot survive outside the laboratory.

The DNA transplants involve chemical washes that gently clean the donor
DNA,
and other washes that make the recipient's outer membrane porous, so the
new
DNA can enter.


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