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The tremendous potential of gene editing

Gene editing is making headlines because of its successful healthcare and agricultural applications.

The technology shows potential to solve both agricultural challenges and human health diseases. So far, gene-editing has been used to successfully treat patients with sickle cell anemia, inherited hearing loss, inherited blindness, and more. There are also gene-editing treatments in development for HIV, cystic fibrosis, and a variety of cancers, according to the World Health Organization. 

PIC will be one of the first organizations to introduce a gene-edited protein into the food supply, but there are more than 500 gene-edited crops under development worldwide. Gene editing is being used to achieve disease resistance, improve nutritional content, eliminate seeds in produce, make crops more tolerant to drought and reduce food waste.

How gene editing is being applied in healthcare:

Sickle cell patient's journey leads to landmark approval of gene-editing treatment

Image Source: Meredith Rizzo/NPR/Meredith Rizzo/NPR

Pioneering gene therapy restores UK girl's hearing

Image Source: BBC.com, BBC Research

Experimental gene therapy restores some vision in patients with inherited blindness

Image Source: Mass Eye and Ear

How gene editing is being applied in food and agriculture:

Chickens resistant to High Path Avian Influenza could prevent future outbreaks

Pairwise developed more palatable, nutritious mustard greens.

Green Venus created an avocado that doesn’t turn brown

What is gene editing?

How is gene-editing different from GMOs?

Gene editing is a new technology that allows scientists to make a single, precise edit to a small portion of an organism’s DNA to achieve a desired trait. While these edits happen at a microscopic (molecular) level, they have the potential to make a significant positive impact on our world. Gene-editing uses CRISPR technology, short for “clustered regularly interspaced short palindromic repeats.” 

Read more about CRISPR and how it works from the National Institutes of Health

Learn how gene-editing was used to create PRRS-resistant pigs.

Gene editing could make pigs resistant to a devastating disease

When the PRRS virus enters a pig’s body, the virus latches onto a small part of particular protein in the pig’s immune system, starting a chain reaction that makes the pigs sick with PRRS and can lead to death. 

So, PIC collaborated with University of Missouri and The Roslin Institute to identify a solution to the devastation of PRRS.

PIC used gene-editing to precisely delete a portion of the gene where the PRRS virus enters the pig. Without the binding site, the virus cannot make the pig sick.

Like humans inherit traits from their parents, the pig’s offspring then inherit the PRRS-resistant trait through traditional breeding.

Gene-edited CD163 protein without binding site

6 reasons why you can feel good about PRRS-Resistant Pigs

Explore the benefits of the PRRS-Resistant Pig

Better Animal Welfare

Reduced Need for Antibiotics

Better for the Environment

Pork That's No Different

Innovative Technology

Earning Regulatory Approval