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CRISPR at 25: The Past, Present, and Future of Genome Editing
Panelists:
Rodolphe Barrangou, PhD
North Carolina State University
Panelist
Rodolphe Barrangou, PhD
Rodolphe Barrangou, PhD, is the T. R. Klaenhammer Distinguished Professor at North Carolina State University, where he leads the CRISPR Lab. Rodolphe spent nine years at Danisco and DuPont, where he made seminal contributions in the functional characterization of CRISPR as a microbial immune system. He has been at NC State since 2013.
For his CRISPR work, Rodolphe has received several international awards, notably the Canada Gairdner International Award, and has been elected to the National Academy of Sciences, the National Academy of Engineering, and the National Academy of Inventors. Rodolphe is a scientific co-founder of Intellia Therapeutics, Locus Biosciences, TreeCo, Ancilia Biosciences, and CRISPR Biotechnologies, and an advisor to Inari and the IGI. He is also the founding Editor in Chief of The CRISPR Journal (published by Mary Ann Liebert, Inc., a Sage partner), which launched in 2018.
Rodolphe holds a degree from Paris Descartes University and a PhD in functional genomics from NC State.
- Time:
It has been almost 25 years since the acronym “CRISPR” was first coined. Since then, CRISPR has become a household word, a star of books and films, and a Nobel Prize–winning discovery. This powerful and disruptive genome editing technology has transformed countless fields, including gene therapy, xenotransplantation, de-extinction and agbiotech. Researchers continue to build on the CRISPR chassis, devising new platforms for bespoke genome editing. But major questions remain around clinical safety, commercial development, ethical deployment, and regulatory oversight.
In the first of a new series of GEN Keynote Webinars, Professor Rodolphe Barrangou, PhD (North Carolina State; EIC, The CRISPR Journal) offers a front-row perspective of the CRISPR revolution, the seminal advances, clinical highlights, and rising applications. Almost two decades ago, Barrangou provided the first experimental demonstration of the functional role of CRISPR. With numerous advisory and entrepreneurial activities in the gene editing space, Barrangou is the ideal guide to discuss CRISPR’s progress in the clinic; the state of the CRISPR toolbox; and the regulatory roadblocks and ethical challenges that will shape the application of CRISPR in agbiotech, germline editing, and other arenas.
Registration for this GEN Keynote Webinar is free. Following this live presentation, Dr. Barrangou will answer audience questions.
Produced with support from:
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