The Code Breaker: Jennifer Doudna, Gene Editing, and the Future of the Human Race, Walter Isaacson, c. 2021.
A Nobel Prize winner.
Introduction: Into the Breach.
Jennifer Doudna: superstar at Berkeley
- co-inventor of CRISPR -- gene editing technology
- her world changed: robot competition canceled for her son, Covid -- March 12, 2020
- the next day, she led a Berkeley team to decide what role they would play in the Covid outbreak
- their first meeting: sat 6 feet apart
- it would be their first and last meeting
- from now on: Zoom and Slack
CRISPR: human technology to do what bacteria have been doing for millennia to defeat viruses. Amazing. Page xvi.
CRISPR:
- the gene-editing tool that Doudna and others developed in 2012 is based on a virus-fighting trick used by bacteria, which have been battling viruses for more than a billion years.
- in their DNA, bacteria develop clustered repeated sequences, known as CRISPRs, that can remember and then destroy viruses that attack them.
- in other words, it's an immune system that can adapt itself to fight each new wave of viruses -- just what we humans need in an era that has bee plagues, as if we were still in the Middle Ages, by repeated viral epidemics.
Steps Doudna took:
- created a coronavirus testing lab;
- postdoc Jennifer Hamilton, was one of the leaders of that team/lab
- created a team to develop new types of coronavirus tests based on CRISPR
- based on lessons learned by starting a company some years earlier that used CRISPR for detecting viral disease
- settled on ten projects
Cross-country competitor: Feng Zhang
- her rival since 2012
- China-born and Iowa-raised researcher at the Broad Institute of MIT and Harvard
CRISPR:
- already science fiction becoming real
- November, 2018: a young Chinese student who had been to some of Doudna's gene-editing conferences used CRISPR to edit embryos and remove a gene that produces a receptor HIV;
- that led to the birth of twin girls, the world's first "designer babies."
A digression: is CRISPR being use in embryo research to "prevent/cure/ameliorate" sickle cell disease?
After two billion years, humans can now edit genes. Time for a discussion with ChatGPT.
Doudna:
- a graduate student in the 1990s
- other biologists were more interested in DNA
- Doudna: RNA
- wow! What a choice!
- Covid-19; seasonal flu viruses: RNA
- if I read this correctly, it was already called CRISPR when Doudna was doing her research -- but Doudna was studying "the CRISPR system" that bacteria were using in their battles against viruses;
- but now Doudna was using that same CRISPER system to edit genes;
- this reminds me of Jensen Huang pivoting with GPUs -- taking chips that were used for gaming to using those same chips for AI -- amazing!
AI prompt: The CRISPR system was already being used by bacteria to fight viruses when Doudna used the CRISPR system to edit genes. So, Doudna did not discover / invent CRISPR. She used the bacterial CRISPR system to edit genes. That was her breakthrough. Is that correct? And, of course, if accurate, that would raise issues with regard to patents. Is that accurate? Your thoughts?
Gemini:
Who discovered CRISPR if Doudna did not?
Does seasonal flu (e.g., Type A -- H1N1 -- use CRISPR CAS to target human DNA? [This was either a typo on my part or is evidence of how much I misunderstood CRISPR at this time.]
***************************
How CRISPR Works
But looks at this. Did Google have a typo in the reply above? "Cas9" stands for "CRISPR associated protein 9" -- not "Cascade complex." Wow. Amazing how Google Gemini missed this. In a gazillion sites "Cas" is shorthand for "CRISPR associated protein." Apparently in some rare cases "Cas" may stand for "Cascade complex" but certainly not in this context.
***************************
By Chapter
Introduction: Into the Breach
Part One: The Origins of Life
Chapters 1 - 8
Part Two: CRISPR
Chapters 9 - 19
Part Three: Gene Editing
Chapters 20 - 31
Part Four: CRISPR in Action
Chapters 33-34
Part Five: Public Scientist
Chapters 35 - 36
Part Six: CRISPR Babies
Chapters 37 - 39
Part Seven: The Moral Questions
Chapters 40 - 43
Part Eight: Dispatches from the Front
Chapters 44 - 47
Part Nine: Coronavirus
Chapters 48 - 56
*********************************
Chapter 13: Genentech
Autumn, 2008: Jillian Banfield tells Doudna she was worried that the most important discoveries had already been made, and it was now time for Doudna to move on.
Doudna demurred. "I knew there was some kind of adaptive immunity going on and wanted to know how it worked."
So, if I'm reading this correctly, researchers understood how the system worked and how bacteria protected themselves from viruses. BUT APPARENTLY, Doudna felt there was more -- she was thinking there was too much "energy" invested in this system not to have a "deeper meaning." She thought that "deeper meaning" might be immunity of some sort; an "immune system" of some sort that would rival what eukaryotic cells have and what researchers have been able to devise.
Which raises the question: do eukaryotic cells have something similar to CRISPR?
Which leads to the next question: why doesn't RNAi protect humans from seasonal flu?
interferon is primary mammalian response against viruses, but
some have suggested that interferon itself may shut down the RNAi system.
Wow.
And then there's the "interferon storm" issue.
Of course this raises even more questions.
Back to the book. Chapter 13:
- Wow. Genetech. Mental breakdown for Doudna.
- Returns to Berkeley after a two-month absence while preparing her move to Genetech, which, of course, did not happen.
Chapter 14:
Chapter 15: Caribou
p. 114: Stanford and its start after WWII.

















