We discuss: 0:01:32 - Feng’s background, experience in developing optogenetics, and his shift toward improving gene-editing technologies 0:10:05 - The discovery of CRISPR in bacterial DNA and the realization that these sequences could be harnessed for gene editing 0:21:48 - How the CRISPR system fights off viral infections and the role of the Cas9 enzyme and PAM sequence 0:29:48 - The limitations of earlier gene-editing technologies prior to CRISPR 0:39:08 - How CRISPR revolutionized the field of gene editing, potential applications, and ongoing challenges 0:51:59 - CRISPR’s potential in treating genetic diseases and the challenges of effective delivery 0:57:55 - How CRISPR is used to treat sickle cell anemia 1:05:51 - Gene editing with base editing, the role of AI in protein engineering, and challenges of delivery to the right cells 1:13:10 - How CRISPR is advancing scientific research by fast-tracking the development of transgenic mice 1:17:43 - Advantages of Cas13’s ability to direct CRISPR to cleave RNA and the advances and remaining challenges of delivery 1:27:55 - CRISPR-Cas9: therapeutic applications in the liver and the eye 1:40:15 - The ethical implications of gene editing, the debate around germline modification, regulation, and more 1:52:45 - Genetic engineering to enhance human traits: challenges, trade-offs, and ethical concerns 1:58:25 - Feng’s early life, the influence of the American education system, and the critical role teachers played in shaping his desire to explore gene-editing technology 2:13:15 - Feng’s optimism about the trajectory of science
@parsias538127 күн бұрын
Feng is an EXCELLENT science communicator, in addition to being a world-class researcher. Rare combo. Kudos to you both!
@tukity16 күн бұрын
What an amazing conversation. This is the science communication that we need
@raizosgoldandtravel26 күн бұрын
Peter, this is the best discussion you’ve had so far. Thank you! Feng is a genius and I have so much respect for him.
@SkipYearSix27 күн бұрын
I’m so thankful that there are humans like these 2 out there trying to find cures for chronic diseases. 🙏
@cosbro538928 күн бұрын
This type of content should have 8 billion views within the 1st 24 hours and 32 billion views after 96 hours ...Thanks to you both and youtube
@RangeMcrangeface26 күн бұрын
I would encourage you to think big.
@Hshjshshjsj7272719 күн бұрын
32 b views… each person on earth watch 4 times? 😂
@tohian10 күн бұрын
Sure. A discussion on CRISPR & gene editing should be view by everyone on earth. 🙄
@RangeMcrangeface9 күн бұрын
@@tohian you missed the joke.
@AA-oe6su27 күн бұрын
Hoping you’re doing well Peter. Thanks for the podcast
@tracibrennan81775 күн бұрын
Amazing video ..watched every minute and will watch again!!! The future is promising if maintained in the right hands.
@Mark-f6z27 күн бұрын
Jennifer Doudna, Nobel prize, anyone?
@aryangod200323 күн бұрын
We need more of Podcasts like these, with eminent scientists and Nobel laureates, and less of "Self Help" type of Podcast that Dr Attia does. Something heavy on science and facts and less on wishful thinking.
@bikojalal312020 күн бұрын
My son has Ethylmalonic Encephalopathy, a very rare disease. There are companies that could create a medication for this condition, but they have said they don’t have enough funding to develop that specific treatment, and these companies are reluctant to invest in something with limited profit potential. I have contacted countless organizations, doctors, and hospitals, but they are unwilling to conduct any research on this disease. He is a patient at the University of Michigan. I also brought him to Stanford Children’s Hospital and Children’s Hospital in Texas.😢
@micaxmica25 күн бұрын
Thank you for this video, much respect for both of you. Also for mentioning the attack on meritocracy 💚
@treewx28 күн бұрын
Awesome guest!
@ngana875521 күн бұрын
The FDA recently approved two treatments for sickle cell disease, one by Bluebird Bio using gene therapy and the other using "base-editing" CRISPR by Vertex. Do you have any comments on which treatment is better? BlueBird Bio's Lyfgenia, costing $3.1 million, is more expensive than Vertex's Casgevy, which costs $2.2 million.
@HassanWorld8 күн бұрын
CRISPR is the technology. It's here to stay. I cover it in details for those interested.
@TheProactivePatients23 күн бұрын
Peter, I think you need to change your term "overexpression" to a "gain of function" versus "loss of function" mutations. Gain of function does not necessarily mean "over expression" just an expression of a gene product that is competing with the normal function or causing an abnormal effect just on it's own (build up of an abnormal product that creates plaques or other issues). Overepression can be of a normal gene product that we need at some level, just have too much (like Her2 in many cancers).
@elefante198627 күн бұрын
talking about palindromes and the number of episodes is 323... Great episode
@patrickturner862824 күн бұрын
Mother Nature is so amazing! Awe inspiring.
@brightflower14427 күн бұрын
Brilliant stuff!
@esgee382927 күн бұрын
where Doudna or Charpentier?
@pathologicaldoubt27 күн бұрын
I don’t think the average joe realizes how much of a big shot Zhang is. He’s essentially the Elon Musk of gene therapy. With his leadership, the Broad Institute essentially has the best claim to the patent of CRISPR tech
@joemoya974327 күн бұрын
But... where the key difference is that Elon Musk takes credit for other's technological developments.
@kapribadi27 күн бұрын
I'm not sure Zheng is the Elon musk of gene therapy. Maybe he is. I thought about this before seeing your comment. The question that Attia asked about scaling these therapies currently in trial, don't have a clear path. It's also not clear that Zheng is driving the scaling of this technology. He's much more on the scientist discovery side. Whereas Elon is much more on the industrial Mogul side, driving up manufacturing scale and driving down cost. I think we have yet to see an Elon musk like person run with this tech and disrupt big pharma... (Disclosure: I've worked for one of Elon's companies as an engineer for many years and have seen it on the inside)
@jjjames689427 күн бұрын
Ahh man this gonna be a good one thanks doc🙌
@renaed00bdavis8627 күн бұрын
Do you know anything about lichen sclerosis? I’ve been diagnosed and don’t know what to do. There are no doctors that can help.
@savead662825 күн бұрын
Best ever. Thank you
@NicholasWilliams-uk9xu27 күн бұрын
I read that this palindrome sequence has a function of repairing DNA, it's bidirectional symmetry? Charge imbalance on one side allows it to bend in the middle?
@Tuti23-yt1vw27 күн бұрын
Imagine your resume says Stanford, Harvard, and MIT. Wow 😮
@Abbale27 күн бұрын
Intelligence is paramount to health
@zacharysbrennan537627 күн бұрын
what’s the hold up? This will not happen for at least 25 years? Other therapies will happen before this.
@aaronfrank964925 күн бұрын
Fascinating.
@808Hawaiian25 күн бұрын
Darwin? You’re describing what a God put together!
@capgains25 күн бұрын
Thoughts on Dr Jack Kruse?
@joshydillens14827 күн бұрын
Very interested in changing ApoE4 staus
@esgee382927 күн бұрын
@@joshydillens148 not so easy for certain disease causing alleles like ApoE4 in adults. If you listen from 1:40:00 to 2:00:00 or so you'll gain some understanding as to why.
@enRod.27 күн бұрын
2:07:00 The first time I heard Peter asking a totally inadequate questio.
@laserhobbyist975126 күн бұрын
OMG, they are using gene editing for my potato chips, it says CRISPER right on the bag.
@TheProactivePatients23 күн бұрын
Took a while to get back to the Eugenics issues potentially associated with this tech if used, especially at the germline level. Genetics as a field has a very poor ethical start. We need to make aure that we don't wnd up where we started.
@币圈复盘28 күн бұрын
wow
@capgains25 күн бұрын
As most try to find meaning in their daily survival Good lord awareness is a fn curse
@felixlavoie-perusse927123 күн бұрын
Great conversation, and I'm a big fan of this podcast, but disappointing. It never got to the main point of Feng's contribution to gene editing and crispr 😔
@novelas35362 күн бұрын
I love this mf
@goldstandardaviation166727 күн бұрын
This makes the anti-vax and anti-immigration crowd's ears bleed
@Abbale27 күн бұрын
Immigration?😂 take your meds
@ExecutiveZombie25 күн бұрын
@@Abbale💀🫡🇺🇸
@novelas35362 күн бұрын
@@AbbaleBros still living in 2016
@billmarko514326 күн бұрын
Please consider Peter's comments about meritocracy and the left's discrimination of Dr. Zhang's ethnicity in your vote next week.
@Ashmar0027 күн бұрын
Please reply to me
@ExecutiveZombie25 күн бұрын
The Freak Show you continue instead of organic learning, brain health and spiritual, mental, physical health. HUMAN Engineering….🧟♀️ It’s starts out great to help diseases-Blah Blah Blah-- and turns into “The Blob” freak show in the movie “The Substance.”
@ahsanmohammed120 күн бұрын
Face too close. Back up.
@ahsanmohammed119 күн бұрын
13:21 Good topic. Tried. Cannot understand. Stopped watching.