How gene editing could help curb the spread of bird flu 

“What this shows is that there’s a proof of concept that we can use to move toward making chickens resistant to the virus. But we’re not there yet,” Wendy Barclay, a virologist and professor at Imperial College London, who co-led the research, said on a press conference call. The study was published today in Nature Communications.  

Bird flu has killed millions of both wild and farmed birds across the world in recent years. It has increasingly affected mammals as well, raising fears among virologists that the virus could adapt to infect humans. 

For the chicken study, the team made changes to a protein gene in the birds’ sperm and eggs. This protein, called ANP32A, helps flu viruses attack chickens’ systems. By rearranging the DNA letters of the ANP32A protein, the researchers were able to restrict the flu virus from infecting the chickens.

“The genetic changes that we made were changes we knew will stop the growth of the virus in the chicken cells,” Alewo Idoko-Akoh, a research fellow at the University of Edinburgh’s Roslin Institute, who was part of the study, explained.         

To further test the resilience of the gene-edited birds, the researchers exposed them to a second, higher dose of the bird flu virus. Of the 10, five became infected. Still, the gene edit did provide some level of protection. The researchers also found that the intervention limited spread of the virus: only one of four non-gene-edited chickens placed in the same incubator got infected, and there was no transmission to gene-edited chickens.    

However, the research team found that in the gene-edited birds, the virus adapted to enlist the support of two related proteins—ANP32B and ANP32E—to replicate.  

This suggests that editing the single gene the researchers targeted is not a robust enough method to work, says Alison Van Eenennaam, an animal geneticist at University of California, Davis, who was not involved in the research. 

The researchers behind the study agree; they next plan to try to develop chickens with edits to all three genes. It could take decades to work through the necessary technical and regulatory steps, but researchers say CRISPR gene editing could eventually save countless chickens’ lives—and transform animal farming. “Chickens rock,” says Van Eenennaam. “It’ll be great to use this technology to produce animals that are not susceptible to diseases.”                

Note: This article have been indexed to our site. We do not claim legitimacy, ownership or copyright of any of the content above. To see the article at original source Click Here

Related Posts
Bilibili Reports Net Revenue of $907M in Q4 2021, Up 51% YoY thumbnail

Bilibili Reports Net Revenue of $907M in Q4 2021, Up 51% YoY

(Source: Bilibili) Your browser doesn’t support HTML5 audio Leading Chinese video streaming platform Bilibili on Thursday announced its unaudited financial results for the fourth quarter and fiscal year ended December 31, 2021. Bilibili’s total net revenue in the fourth quarter was 5.7808 billion yuan ($907.1 million), representing an increase of 51% from the same period…
Read More
GM’s BrightDrop EV vans found a huge new customer thumbnail

GM’s BrightDrop EV vans found a huge new customer

GM brand BrightDrop has announced a new partnership with Walmart that’ll involve thousands of its electric vehicles for use in the retailer’s last-mile delivery network. In addition, BrightDrop and FedEx have expanded their existing partnership, increasing the delivery company’s initial EV reservation from 500 to 2,000 vehicles. BrightDrop/GM All signs point toward an all-electric future…
Read More
Stor guide: Knepen som gör Windows 11 mer optimerat thumbnail

Stor guide: Knepen som gör Windows 11 mer optimerat

Meny IDG Medlem Här har vi samlat allt som gäller ditt medlemskap IDG Medlem Här har vi samlat allt som gäller ditt medlemskap Meny Anders Lundberg Foto: Microsoft PLUS Lär dig knepen som får Windows 11 att bli lite snabbare, enklare att jobba med och mindre nedskräpat. Besöksadress: Magnus Ladulåsgatan 65 106 78 Stockholm Tel:…
Read More
Jogger from The Well to a new top job in a new training concept thumbnail

Jogger from The Well to a new top job in a new training concept

Annema Refsnes, Ole Petter Hjelle Yngvar Andersen og Arnulf Refsnes står bak treningskonseptet Naardic, der medlemmene deltar på treningstimer med instruktør på videokonferanse. Driften startet for fullt for ett år siden og nå består selskapet av ti IT-utviklere, åtte i administrasjonen og 25 trenere, blant dem flere kjente profiler som Olaf Tufte. - Etter en…
Read More
Index Of News
Total
0
Share