Policy Punchline

George Church: The Father of Human Genome Project and CRISPR Genome Engineering

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Synopsis

George Church is Robert Winthrop Professor of Genetics at Harvard Medical School and Professor of Health Sciences and Technology at Harvard and MIT. He is known as the father of synthetic biology and the CRISPR-CAS9 gene editing technology, and he is widely recognized as one of the most important geneticists of our age. In 1984, he developed the first direct genomic sequencing method, which resulted in the first genome sequence. He helped initiate the Human Genome Project in 1984 and the Personal Genome Project in 2005. He leads his own lab in Harvard and is also affiliated with the Broad Institute, the Wyss Institute, and a wide number of private companies that were spun off from his innovations. In this interview, Tiger asks Prof. Church about his time as a graduate student and postdoc, how Harvard took a chance on him for many times during his early research career, his experience starting the Human Genome Project and its wide-ranging impacts, his critical contribution to the CRISPR gene editing technolog