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Timestamps are as accurate as they can be but may be slightly off. We encourage you to listen to the full context.
In this episode of Core Memory, host Ashley Vance interviews Nobel Prize winner Jennifer Doudna, the renowned biochemist behind the revolutionary CRISPR gene editing technology. (01:45) Doudna discusses the current state of CRISPR therapies, from breakthrough treatments like Casgevy for sickle cell disease to the remarkable case of baby KJ who received rapid CRISPR therapy for a rare metabolic disorder. The conversation explores the challenges facing CRISPR technology today, particularly around delivery mechanisms and cost reduction, while highlighting the groundbreaking work being done at the Innovative Genomics Institute. (29:00) Doudna also shares insights on CRISPR's potential in agriculture, from methane-reducing cattle to disease-resistant crops, and discusses how AI is accelerating discovery in biotechnology.
Jennifer Doudna is a distinguished biochemist and Nobel Prize winner who co-developed the revolutionary CRISPR-Cas9 gene editing technology. She won the 2020 Nobel Prize in Chemistry alongside Emmanuelle Charpentier for developing "a method for high-precision genome editing." Based at UC Berkeley for over a decade, she founded the Innovative Genomics Institute and has co-founded at least six companies focused on CRISPR applications, generating approximately 15% of Berkeley's intellectual property annually.
Ashley Vance is the host of Core Memory podcast and an accomplished technology journalist. He previously worked at The New York Times and is known for his biographical works on tech leaders like Elon Musk. Like Doudna, he is a Pomona College alumnus and has extensively covered breakthrough technologies and innovative companies throughout his career.
The approval of Casgevy for sickle cell disease and the rapid treatment of baby KJ represent watershed moments for CRISPR technology. (12:27) These cases prove that CRISPR has moved beyond laboratory promise to deliver functional cures for patients. Victoria Gray, one of the first patients to receive CRISPR therapy in 2019, experienced a complete transformation in her quality of life - from frequent hospitalizations to being able to work and engage with her children normally. While these treatments are expensive and complex to administer, they demonstrate that the technology works and provide a foundation for future improvements in cost and accessibility.
Despite having sophisticated gene editing tools, the biggest challenge facing CRISPR therapies is getting them to the right cells in the body. (26:53) Current delivery methods largely rely on lipid nanoparticles that primarily target the liver, limiting therapeutic applications. However, Doudna expresses confidence that this challenge will be solved by studying how viruses naturally target specific cell types. Viruses like COVID-19 and HIV demonstrate nature's ability to precisely target respiratory or immune cells by recognizing unique surface molecules, providing a roadmap for developing targeted CRISPR delivery systems.
CRISPR's potential in agriculture may ultimately impact more people than medical applications. (57:00) The Innovative Genomics Institute has developed methane-reducing cattle that not only produce less greenhouse gas but are also 20-25% more productive in milk and meat production. (52:07) By editing the microbiome of calves once at birth, researchers can permanently alter methane-producing metabolic pathways. This technology could be deployed globally to farmers at low cost, addressing climate change while improving agricultural productivity - a compelling value proposition for widespread adoption.
The rapid development of CRISPR therapy for baby KJ - from diagnosis to treatment in months rather than years - demonstrates what's possible when multiple stakeholders coordinate effectively. (23:26) However, this required pulling together the IGI, Broad Institute, Aldevron, and the FDA in an unprecedented collaborative effort. Doudna suggests that as we accumulate more CRISPR effectiveness data, AI models could eventually predict therapy outcomes accurately enough to streamline clinical testing requirements, particularly for rare diseases where traditional trial timelines are too slow to help patients.
Beyond treating existing diseases, CRISPR could enable preventive medicine by allowing people to modify genes protective against conditions like Alzheimer's, heart disease, or infectious diseases before symptoms appear. (71:54) While this represents a transformative healthcare approach, it challenges traditional pharmaceutical business models built around ongoing treatments rather than one-time cures. This tension between transformative patient outcomes and industry economics will need to be resolved as CRISPR capabilities advance toward preventive applications.