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Gene off-switch puts us in charge

By Philip Cohen

14 August 2004

THE discovery that genes can be “silenced” using a technique called RNA interference is creating a stir in medicine. And now it seems the technique is even more powerful than thought, able to switch off genes permanently by physically altering our DNA.

This could open up new avenues for fighting diseases, and perhaps even explain the workings of our cells. “So far we have only shown this for one gene, for cells in a test tube,” says Kevin Morris at the Beckman Research Institute in Duarte, California. “But I’m optimistic that it has wider implications.” His team is already planning…

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