The genetic code to alllife on Earth, both simple and complex, comes down to four basic letters: A, C,T and G.
Untangling the role thatthese letters play in lifes blueprint has allowed scientists to understandwhat makes everything from bacteria to people the way they are. But as researchershave learned more, they have also sought ways to tinker with this blueprint,bringing ethical dilemmas into the spotlight. The Gene, a two-part PBS documentary from executive producer Ken Burnsairing April 7 and 14, explores the benefits and risks that come withdeciphering lifes code.
The film begins with oneof those ethical challenges. The opening moments describe how biophysicist HeJiankui used the gene-editing tool CRISPR/Cas9 to alter the embryos of twin girls who were born in China in 2018 (SN: 12/17/18). Worldwide, criticscondemned the move, claiming it was irresponsible to change the girls DNA, asexperts dont yet fully understand the consequences.
This moment heraldedthe arrival of a new era, narrator David Costabile says. An era in whichhumans are no longer at the mercy of their genes, but can control and evenchange them.
Headlines and summaries of the latest Science News articles, delivered to your inbox
The story sets the stagefor a prominent theme throughout the documentary: While genetics holdsincredible potential to improve the lives of people with genetic diseases,there are always those who will push science to its ethical limits. But thedriving force in the film is the inquisitive nature of the scientistsdetermined to uncover what makes us human.
The Gene, based on the book of the same name by Siddhartha Mukherjee (SN:12/18/16), one of the documentarys executive producers, highlights many ofthe most famous discoveries in genetics. The film chronicles Gregor Mendels classicpea experiments describing inheritance and how experts ultimately revealed inthe 1940s that DNA a so-called stupid molecule composed of just four chemicalbases, adenine (A), thymine (T),cytosine (C) and guanine (G) is responsible for storing geneticinformation. Historical footage, inBurns typical style, brings to life stories describing the discovery of DNAshelical structure in the 1950s and the success of the Human Genome Project indecoding the human genetic blueprint in 2003.
The film also touches ona few of the ethical violations that came from these discoveries. The eugenicsmovement in both Nazi Germany and the United States in the early 20th century aswell as the story of the first person to die in a clinical trial for genetherapy, in 1999, cast a morbid shadow on the narrative.
Interwoven into thistimeline are personal stories from people who suffer from genetic diseases.These vignettes help viewers grasp the hope new advances can give patients asexperts continue to wrangle with DNA in efforts to make those cures.
In the documentarysfirst installment, which focuses on the early days of genetics, viewers meet a family whose daughter is grappling with arare genetic mutation that causes her nerve cells to die. The family searchesfor a cure alongside geneticist Wendy Chung of Columbia University. The secondpart follows efforts to master the human genome and focuses on AudreyWinkelsas, a molecular biologist at the National Institutes of Health studyingspinal muscular atrophy, a disease she herself has, and a family fighting tosave their son from a severe form of the condition.
For science-interested viewers, the documentary does not disappoint. The Gene covers what seems to be every angle of genetics history from the ancient belief that sperm absorbed mystical vapors to pass traits down to offspring to the discovery of DNAs structure to modern gene editing. But the stories of the scientists and patients invested in overcoming diseases like Huntingtons and cancer make the film all the more captivating.
Go here to read the rest:
The PBS documentary The Gene showcases genetics promise and pitfalls - Science News
- Investing in Pacific Biosciences of California, Inc (NASDAQ:PACB) - Securities.io - January 15th, 2021
- Medscape study in collaboration with 23andMe finds Primary Care Physicians are increasingly more comfortable with direct-to-consumer genetic health... - January 15th, 2021
- Gaucher Disease Treatment Market: Shows Increasing Demand To Be Observed In The Coming Decade | Genzyme Corporation, Pfizer, Inc., Shire Human... - January 15th, 2021
- The Role of RNA Structure in Replication of Influenza and Coronaviruses - Imperial College London - January 15th, 2021
- Here's what we know sex with Neanderthals was like - BBC News - January 13th, 2021
- Gaucher Disease Treatment Market Shows Expected Trend to Guide from 2020-2026 with Growth Analysis | Genzyme Corporation, Pfizer, Inc., Shire Human... - January 13th, 2021
- Best from science journals: Why are platypus so weird? - The Hindu - January 13th, 2021
- Developmental Biologist Kathryn Anderson Dies at 68 - The Scientist - January 13th, 2021
- "Diversity" Nonsense Cost Tens of Thousands of Lives - Reason - January 3rd, 2021
- Research Roundup: Different Antibody Responses to COVID-19 and More - BioSpace - January 1st, 2021
- Health and Social Care Professionals Recognised in New Year Honours - Medscape - January 1st, 2021
- 10 things we learned about our human ancestors in 2020 - Livescience.com - January 1st, 2021
- Study of More Than 1 Million People Finds Intriguing Link Between Iron Levels And Lifespan - ScienceAlert - January 1st, 2021
- Central University of Punjab conducted expert talk on 'How to organise Biology Teaching - India Education Diary - January 1st, 2021
- Breakfast Table With Jewish Newsletters - The Nation - January 1st, 2021
- UK Down's syndrome births halve as parents opt for blood test to identify the condition - Telegraph.co.uk - January 1st, 2021
- The role of the microbiota in human genetic adaptation - Science - December 6th, 2020
- Is anyone on Earth not an immigrant? - Livescience.com - December 6th, 2020
- Insights on Human Genetics Market 2020 to 2027: COVID-19 Impact Analysis, Drivers, Opportunity Analysis, Restraints, and Forecast - The Courier - December 6th, 2020
- Host genetics and infectious disease: new tools, insights and translational opportunities - DocWire News - December 6th, 2020
- Rare variants tied to neuronal migration, autism traits - Spectrum - December 6th, 2020
- Seminars Explore the Immorality of the Eugenics Movement and Its Implications Today - Bowdoin News - December 6th, 2020
- Charting a path forward with unifying definition of cytokine storm - Penn Today - December 6th, 2020
- Grooms Wanted - The Tribune - December 6th, 2020
- Causal Association Between HDL-C, TG and Gout Identified - The Cardiology Advisor - December 6th, 2020
- Amgen To Webcast Investor Call At ASH 2020 - PRNewswire - December 6th, 2020
- PTC Announces Translarna Approval in Russia for the Treatment of Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy - BioSpace - December 6th, 2020
- Histone H3.3 beyond cancer: Germline mutations in Histone 3 Family 3A and 3B cause a previously unidentified neurodegenerative disorder in 46 patients... - December 6th, 2020
- Teach Me in 10 Why COVID-19 Genetics Research May Be Biased With Dr Thomas Stoeger - Technology Networks - December 6th, 2020
- Central University of Punjab organized Webinar on Population Genomics and Public Health' - India Education Diary - December 6th, 2020
- 10 things Kid Of The Year Gitanjali Rao told Shah Rukh Khan on TED Talks in 2019 - India Today - December 6th, 2020
- Planet of the Apes redux? Human brain gene inserted into monkey fetuses enlarged their brains, raising ethical concerns - Genetic Literacy Project - December 6th, 2020
- GeneTx and Ultragenyx Announce Presentation of Phase 1/2 Data on Investigational GTX-102 in Patients with Angelman Syndrome - GlobeNewswire - December 6th, 2020
- Study Identifies Breast Cancer Risk and Disease-Causing Mutations in Women Over 65 - Cancer Network - November 29th, 2020
- Scientists say West Africans originally migrated to East Africa - Quartz Africa - November 29th, 2020
- Future Visioning the Role of CRISPR Gene Editing: Navigating Law and Ethics to Regenerate Health and Cure Disease - IPWatchdog.com - November 29th, 2020
- Future Visioning The Role Of CRISPR Gene Editing: Navigating Law And Ethics To Regenerate Health And Cure Disease - Technology - United States -... - November 29th, 2020
- Understanding the immunology of COVID-19 - SelectScience - November 29th, 2020
- Thirteen TUM researchers among the most cited worldwide - India Education Diary - November 29th, 2020
- Scientists successfully implanted human genes into monkeys to increase their brain mass - Boing Boing - November 29th, 2020
- Gaucher Disease Treatment Market Booming in Americas & Europe With Top Players, Growth, Size, Major Drivers and Forecast to 2026 | Genzyme... - November 24th, 2020
- Prevail Therapeutics Granted Composition of Matter Patent for Experimental Gene Therapy Program PR001 - GlobeNewswire - November 24th, 2020
- Top Oxford vaccinologist explains whats ahead in the war against Covid-19 - India Today - November 24th, 2020
- Twist Bioscience Reports Fourth Quarter and Full Year Fiscal 2020 Financial Results - Business Wire - November 24th, 2020
- Human Genetics - David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA - November 6th, 2020
- Largest Study To-Date Focused on Undiagnosed Genetic Disease Patients Reveals That Bionano's Optical Genome Mapping Technology Can Diagnose... - November 6th, 2020
- Invitae Reports $68.7 Million in Revenue Driven by 170,000 Samples Accessioned in the Third Quarter of 2020 - PRNewswire - November 6th, 2020
- NIH researchers identify gene in mice that controls food cravings, desire to exercise - National Institutes of Health - November 6th, 2020
- Experiencing happiness likely contributed to the dramatic growth and complexity of the human brain - Genetic Literacy Project - November 6th, 2020
- Race, genetics, and their impact on health - Mumbai Mirror - November 6th, 2020
- Amgen To Present At The 29th Annual Credit Suisse Healthcare Conference - WFMZ Allentown - November 6th, 2020
- Prevail Therapeutics Announces Decisive Victory in Arbitration Brought by Alector against Prevail's CEO - GlobeNewswire - November 6th, 2020
- Interactive: How Pomeranians, Poodles, Great Danes and 158 other dog breeds are genetically related to each other - Genetic Literacy Project - November 6th, 2020
- How dogs tracked their humans across the ancient world - Science Magazine - October 31st, 2020
- Prowess of Bionano Genomics' Saphyr System in Uncovering Novel Genetic Variations That Cause Cancer and Genetic Disease in Full Display at ASHG 2020 -... - October 31st, 2020
- Boundless Bio Presents Research Showcasing its Imaging and Single-Cell Sequencing Platform for Extrachromosomal DNA (ecDNA) Detection at the 2020... - October 31st, 2020
- Parental age plays small role in large mutations tied to autism - Spectrum - October 31st, 2020
- Autoantibodies Block Interferons in 10% of Severe COVID-19 Cases - Contagionlive.com - October 31st, 2020
- Insitro and BMS Team Up to Pave the Way for New ALS and FTD Treatments - BioSpace - October 31st, 2020
- Members of medical community call for shift from race-based to race-conscious medicine - Yale Daily News - October 31st, 2020
- New screening tool could turn up genes tied to developmental disorders - STAT - October 31st, 2020
- Angelika Amon, cell biologist who pioneered research on chromosome imbalance, dies at 53 - MIT News - October 31st, 2020
- Panelists debate the implications and ethics of stem cell research - Johns Hopkins News-Letter - October 31st, 2020
- Activating Inflammasome May Improve Cancer's Response To Immunotherapy And Parp Inhibitors - Newswise - October 31st, 2020
- How immunotherapy is revolutionizing cancer care - Genetic Literacy Project - October 31st, 2020
- Cancer Genetics and StemoniX Sign Definitive Agreement to Merge - GlobeNewswire - August 26th, 2020
- Canada Foundation for Innovation invests $9.3M in McGill highly-specialized research infrastructures - Science Business - August 26th, 2020
- NeuBase Therapeutic's CEO, Dietrich A. Stephan, Ph.D., to Present at Tribe Public's Presentation and Q&A Webinar Event on August 26, 2020 - Stockhouse - August 26th, 2020
- Three lessons from the Federal Circuit's recent 101 reversal in XY v Trans Ova Genetics - IAM - August 26th, 2020
- Gains for humans, cows and the environment in breeding a socially acceptable cow - Dairy News Australia - August 26th, 2020
- Returning Weldon to head up full-time lab - Royal Gazette - August 26th, 2020
- PacBio's Focus on Human Genomics And Read Length Sweet Spot - Bio-IT World - July 21st, 2020
- Staten Biotechnology, in collaboration with Novo Nordisk, starts dosing of anti-apoC3 antibody SST-5058 in First-in-Human Trial | Antibodies | News... - July 21st, 2020
- FDA Action Alert: Jazz, ANI and Ultragenyx - BioSpace - July 21st, 2020
- Gaucher Disease Treatment Market Global Advance Stimulators, Market Size Composition and Market Subdivision Over the Prediction Period - 3rd Watch... - July 21st, 2020
- Humanized Mouse Model Market Key Players are Aggressively Investing on Research and Development - BioSpace - July 21st, 2020
- Coronavirus is not mutating to be weaker over time, genetics show - Business Insider - Business Insider - July 21st, 2020
- Thermo Fisher Scientific and First Genetics JCS Partner to Develop Next-Generation Sequencing-Based Diagnostics in Russia - PRNewswire - July 13th, 2020
- We Are Slowly but Steadily Unraveling the Genetics of This Pandemic - National Review - July 13th, 2020
- Human Genetics Market Size By Product Analysis, Application, End-Users, Regional Outlook, Competitive Strategies And Forecast Up To 2026 - 3rd Watch... - July 13th, 2020