Gene Therapy: Nature Versus Man
With the advent of cutting-edge genome editing technologies such as CRISPR and the use of RNA moieties for modulation of cell function, it appears that we are at the brink of medical and scientific breakthrough in managing and potentially “fixing” disease-causing genetic mutations and defects. Just a few decades back, viral vector-mediated gene therapy and RNA interference (RNAi)-based methodologies were thought to be the panacea. Andrew Fire and Craig Mellow were awarded the Noble prize in Medicine in 2006 for describing a fundamental mechanism of gene regulation in their landmark paper published in Nature using RNAi in 1998. However, RNAi had been first described in 1928 for tobacco mosaic virus by S.A. Wingard. Before the term RNAi was coined, the mechanism was described as post-transcriptional gene silencing or PTGS and the role of PTGS in antiviral immunity was also described. However, discoveries made by plant biologists are seldom in the limelight or get the credit they deserve.
Natural Genetic Recombination Forms The Basis of Genetic Diversity
Exchange of genetic material in nature is a unique phenomenon that is confined to the process of sexual reproduction. Even unicellular organisms (Prokaryotes) such as bacteria and yeast undergo sexual reproduction. While prokaryotes don’t have male and female gametes, they…