New technique holds promise for understanding
genes that protect corals from rising temperatures
Josh Gabbatiss Science Correspondent
The Independent Online
Genetically
engineered coral
has been created by a team at America’s prestigious Stanford University, in a
project they hope will serve as a “blueprint” for future coral conservation.
For the first time, researchers were able to
apply a unique tool called CRISPR-Cas9 to edit coral genes.
In the future they hope to identify genes
involved in coral survival, especially those that help them tolerate the rising
temperatures that have led to catastrophic reef “die-offs”.
While scientists have emphasised that
genetically enhanced “super-corals” are still a long way from becoming reality,
this work is still thought to hold great promise for coral protection.
“We hope that future experiments using
CRISPR-Cas9 will help us develop a better understanding of basic coral biology
that we then can apply to predict – and perhaps ameliorate – what’s going
to happen in the future due to a changing climate,” explained Dr Phillip Cleve,
a geneticist and the lead author of the new study.
CRISPR-Cas9 has become the biologist’s go-to
gene-editing tool in recent years, but it has proved difficult to apply it to
corals due to the way they reproduce.
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