Reactions to the National Academies/Royal Society Report onHeritable Human Genome Editing
Author(s) -
Misha Angrist,
Rodolphe Barrangou,
Françoise Βaylis,
Carolyn Brokowski,
Gaétan Burgio,
Arthur L. Caplan,
Carolyn Riley Chapman,
George M. Church,
Robert CookDeegan,
Bryan Cwik,
Jennifer A. Doudna,
John H. Evans,
Henry T. Greely,
Laura Hercher,
J. Benjamin Hurlbut,
Richard O. Hynes,
Tetsuya Ishii,
Samira Kiani,
LaTasha Hoskins Lee,
Guillaume Levrier,
David R. Liu,
Jeantine E. Lunshof,
Kerry Lynn Macintosh,
Debra Mathews,
Eric M. Meslin,
Peter H.R. Mills,
Lluı́s Montoliu,
Kiran Musunuru,
Dianne Nicol,
Helen C. O’Neill,
Ren-Zong Qiu,
Robert Ranisch,
Jacob S. Sherkow,
Sheetal Soni,
Sharon F. Terry,
Eric J. Topol,
Robert Williamson,
Feng Zhang,
Kevin Davies
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
the crispr journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2573-1602
pISSN - 2573-1599
DOI - 10.1089/crispr.2020.29106.man
Subject(s) - bioethics , genome editing , dozen , perspective (graphical) , swift , genome , political science , genetics , engineering ethics , biology , law , computer science , engineering , artificial intelligence , gene , arithmetic , mathematics , programming language
In September 2020, a detailed report on Heritable Human Genome Editing was published. The report offers a translational pathway for the limited approval of germline editing under limited circumstances and assuming various criteria have been met. In this perspective, some three dozen experts from the fields of genome editing, medicine, bioethics, law, and related fields offer their candid reactions to the National Academies/Royal Society report, highlighting areas of support, omissions, disagreements, and priorities moving forward.
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