Filtern
Dokumenttyp
- Bericht (1)
- Arbeitspapier (1)
Sprache
- Englisch (2) (entfernen)
Schlagworte
- Analysis (1)
- CRISPR (1)
- Designer-Baby (1)
- Ethics (1)
- Gene Technology (1)
- Genomchirurgie (1)
- Gentechnikrecht (1)
- Gentechnologie (1)
- Gentechnologiebericht (1)
- Gentherapie (1)
- Keimbahn (1)
- Medicine & health (1)
- Reproduktionsmedizin (1)
- Single Cell Omics (1)
- biotechnology (1)
- gene technology (1)
- gene therapy (1)
- genetic engineering (1)
- genome editing (1)
- interdisciplinary (1)
- molecular medicine (1)
Volltext vorhanden
- ja (2)
Institut
- Interdisziplinäre Arbeitsgruppe Gentechnologiebericht (2) (entfernen)
Single-cell analyses comprise a multitude of analytical methods that share a common feature, namely the focus on individual cells. This is in contrast to previous methods that provided summarized data for cell clusters, groups of cells, tissues and organs. The new field offers huge potential not only for basic research, but also for medical and biotechnological applications, as it opens up new levels in the context-related and personal interpretation of biological interconnections. This brochure on single-cell analysis provides an overview on the new possibilities from the viewpoint of developmental biology, biomedicine and bioinformatics, but also addresses possible social im-plications and consequences.
New, precise genetic engineering methods for genome alteration in living cells, which can be classed together under the generic heading “genome surgery”,are currently sparking a revolution in biomedical research. The Interdisciplinary Research Group Gene Technology Report is, in principle, in favour of research on these promising new methods for the medical sector. However, for the time being, it has clearly spoken out against gene surgery experiments on the human germ line, which could also enter the realm of possibility thanks to these methods.The research group, therefore, supports the call, which has already been discussed at length in scientific and public circles, for a moratorium for germ line experiments. The period of the moratorium should be used to debate the experimental,
ethical and legal aspects of germ line therapy in an open, transparent
and critical manner with a view to more clearly defining the opportunities and
risks of these technologies for man and nature, and to elaborating recommendations for future regulations. The goal of this analysis is to promote a discourse of this kind.