Simons Center for the Social Brain
  • Our Research
    • Impact
      • Reaching beyond MIT
    • Targeted Projects
    • Postdoctoral Fellowship Research
    • Seed Grants
    • Technology Hubs
  • Our People
    • Investigators
    • Postdoctoral Fellows
      • Postdoctoral Fellows
      • Simons Postdoctoral Fellows: In their own words
    • Simons Center MSRP Summer students
  • Apply For Funding
    • Targeted Project Funding
    • Postdoctoral Fellowship Funding
  • Events
    • SCSB Events Overview
    • Colloquium Series
    • Lunch Series
    • UnrulyArt Program
    • Special Events
    • Past Events
      • Past Colloquium Series Speakers
      • Past Lunch Series Speakers
      • Past Special Events
  • News
    • SCSB Newsletters
  • Our Values
  • Support Us
    • Support Our Research
    • Participate in Research
  • Contact Us

Home

»

News

»

SCSB News

»

New system for human genome editing has potential to increase power and precision of DNA engineering
New system for human genome editing has potential to increase power and precision of DNA engineering

New system for human genome editing has potential to increase power and precision of DNA engineering

Image courtesy of Broad Institute/Science Photo Images
Image courtesy of Broad Institute/Science Photo Images

[Source: Broad Institute, September 25, 2015]

A team including the scientist who first harnessed the CRISPR-Cas9 system for mammalian genome editing has now identified a different CRISPR system with the potential for even simpler and more precise genome engineering.

In a study published today in Cell, Feng Zhang and his colleagues at the Broad Institute of MIT and Harvard and the McGovern Institute for Brain Research at MIT, with co-authors Eugene Koonin at the National Institutes of Health, Aviv Regev of the Broad Institute and the MIT Department of Biology, and John van der Oost at Wageningen University, describe the unexpected biological features of this new system and demonstrate that it can be engineered to edit the genomes of human cells.

Read more…

SCSB_Newsletter_Fall-2025_cover

Contact Us:

Simons Center for the Social Brain
43 Vassar Street
MIT Building 46, Room 6237
Cambridge, MA 02139
Accessibility

· © 2025 Simons Center for the Social Brain · ·

keyboard_arrow_up