The New Age of Medicine
Released on 12/07/2023
Hi, everyone.
My name's Emily Mullin, and I cover biotech for WIRED.
It is my great pleasure to introduce
someone who really needs no introduction,
CRISPR pioneer, Jennifer Doudna.
She is a biochemist
at the University of California, Berkeley.
Dr. Doudna, of course, won the Nobel Prize in 2020
for her role in discovering the gene editing system
known as CRISPR.
She's also the founder of the Innovative Genomics Institute,
a joint effort between UC Berkeley, and UC San Francisco.
Please, let's welcome Dr. Doudna to the stage.
[bright music] [audience clapping]
Thank you so much for being here, Dr. Doudna.
It's been 11 years,
over 11 years since your landmark paper
appeared in the Journal of Science
first describing CRISPR as a novel genome editing system.
For all of us in the room, for all of our benefit,
can you remind everyone
what the acronym CRISPR stands for
and where CRISPR comes from?
Well, hi, Emily, it's a great pleasure to be here.
Hi, everybody.
So CRISPR is an acronym that stands
for Clustered Regularly Interspaced
Short Palindromic Repeats.
[audience laughing] Remember that?
I'm amazed I remember it.
But what it really is,
is a very powerful technology for editing genomes,
editing the code of life.
So imagine a tool that allows scientists
to literally go inside of a cell
and make a precise change to the DNA in the cell
that encodes all the information required for life.
And we can do this now with a precision
that allows us to program CRISPR
to target a particular gene,
I'm sure we'll get into what kinds of things are happening,
but it means that we can understand the function of genes
at a level that was never possible before.
And, most importantly,
we can actually manipulate those genes,
we can rewrite the code,
and that's what makes this technology so powerful.
Thinking back to the early days
of when you were studying CRISPR in the lab,
was there a moment either in the lab,
or maybe it was over your breakfast,
or driving home from work one day
when the potential of CRISPR
really dawned on you?
Well, you know, CRISPR came from fundamental curiosity
driven research into a bacterial immune system,
a mechanism that bacteria used to fight viral infection.
And it was by studying how that works,
that we figured out how to harness it
as a very different kind of technology
for manipulating DNA.
And, for me, I think it was really the moment
at which we recognized the mechanism
of this immune system,
and how it could be used to target DNA
in a programmable way,
and the understanding of how to program it
that, for me, was that moment
of kind of the aha moment of saying,
This technology is really going to change the world.
So for those of us who are not geneticists,
why edit genes at all?
You know, why not just give somebody
a small molecule drug, for instance?
Well, imagine that you had a way to manipulate genes
that cause disease or cause health.
It gives us a tool that means that in the future,
and the future is now by the way,
we won't have to take a drug
over a long period of time to treat disease,
but we can actually, for a genetic disease,
go to its source and make a corrective change
at the level of DNA.
So it fundamentally changes the way we think
about our health and the way
we think about the future of medicine.
And the hope is that these will be one-time treatments,
a one and done, correct? That's right.
So in mid-November, some of you might have heard
that the UK approved the first CRISPR-based therapy,
it's called Casgevy.
It is a one-time treatment
for people with sickle cell disease
made by Vertex Pharmaceuticals and CRISPR Therapeutics.
What was it like for you, Dr. Doudna,
when you found out this news
that CRISPR had essentially moved from an idea,
a concept in the lab to reality,
to treating patients to something
that doctors can now prescribe
to people with this terrible disease?
The reality of that, for me,
came home when I met Victoria Gray,
who is the first US patient to receive the CRISPR therapy
for her sickle cell disease.
Extraordinary story of a person
who had lived with this genetic disorder,
had affected her whole life,
made it difficult for her to be a mom to her kids,
to pursue her business interests.
And after receiving this therapy,
a one-and-done treatment,
it completely transformed her life.
She didn't have to deal
with the effects of sickle cell disease anymore,
and she was able to enroll in business school,
and she's starting a clothing company, it's amazing.
So, you know, seeing that kind of effect on somebody's life
and realizing that science and technology
are starting to enable people
to truly transform their future is extraordinary.
Right, I've spoken with sickle cell experts,
doctors who treat patients with this terrible disorder,
and they say this is truly
a transformative therapy,
these patients who have these terrible,
excruciating pain episodes
and now they don't have to deal with that anymore.
Here in the US, the FDA is now poised
to decide on whether to approve this therapy
by the end of this week,
and perhaps today we might hear actually, we don't know,
could happen Friday at 4:00 PM, like the FDA often does.
Some people are saying that this is a cure.
How do you feel about the C-word?
Well, how do I feel about the C-word?
I feel very excited about it.
I think we have to be cautious,
because it's still the early days of CRISPR.
But so far it looks like people
that receive this one-and-done treatment
truly are cured of the effects of their disease.
What are the biggest safety concerns
with CRISPRing cells
that are put into a person's body,
like with this therapy,
or as we're talking about future therapies
that might actually have the CRISPR mechanism
right in the body where you're CRISPRing
people's tissues, organs,
injecting this gene editing treatment right into the body?
Well, I have to say I love your use
of the word CRISPR as a verb, Emily, that's great.
To CRISPR. [laughs]
But I think, you know, when we think about safety,
it's important to recognize that this tool
is being used today to make permanent changes to DNA,
but it's also possible to use it in a way that makes changes
that are reversible.
So I think going forward there will be a whole toolbox
of CRISPR tools that allow the kind of manipulation
to genes that is appropriate
given a particular disease or application.
But it is critical to maintain a focus on safety,
and, of course, that's what the whole
clinical trial process is all about.
Right, so with this therapy, and with others,
we hear about off-target effects.
Can you talk about what off-target effects mean?
And if we're talking about a precise genome editing tool
that's programmed to target
a very small place in a gene,
what could go wrong?
Well, we don't want it to target the wrong place
in the wrong gene.
And so the goal really is to ensure
that CRISPR is as accurate and safe as possible.
There's been a huge effort in the field over the last decade
to understand, you know,
when and how does CRISPR make a mistake?
And when it does, what can we do about it?
And also, most importantly, how do we avoid that?
And I think what's very interesting
is that looking at the clinical data
that are coming from these trials that are ongoing,
it's turning out that in clinically relevant cells,
using the type of validated CRISPR tools
that are being deployed in the clinic,
it appears really very safe.
It doesn't mean that we shouldn't continue
to work on this and pay very close attention to it,
but I think so far that issue has really not been a problem
in the application of CRISPR in humans.
The process of administering this sickle cell treatment
for patients is complex.
It's complicated, it's not as simple as taking a pill
or getting an injection.
It involves extracting patient's stem cells
from the bone marrow.
Then in the lab you have to CRISPR them,
to use it as a verb again.
And then, those cells are then returned
to the patient eventually.
But in order to do that,
the patient is in the hospital for many, many weeks.
They have to go through chemotherapy
to get their body ready to receive these cells.
There are all sorts of side effects
that they might have because of this process.
So it's not something that I think patients
are gonna go into lightly,
even though it does carry the promise of the C-word, a cure.
So I'm wondering, in the future,
do you think that this process could be simplified,
especially for patients who really, really want this,
but maybe the prospect of this complicated,
complex therapy, it's too much maybe for them
to think about and to undergo.
So how are scientists like yourself thinking
about simplifying this process
so that it's not so arduous,
I guess, for the patient to go through?
Well, it's not only arduous to go through,
but it also is expensive.
And that's one of the real challenges currently
is that this therapy is expected to be priced
somewhere between 1.3 and $2 million a patient.
So that's a price point that just,
you know, will make it out of reach for most people globally
that could benefit from it.
So I've been very interested in the expansion of CRISPR,
you know, into the world in a way that makes it affordable
and accessible to people that can benefit from it.
That was a very important reason we started
the Innovative Genomics Institute
at the University of California here in the Bay Area.
I think, you know, the Bay Area
has always signified innovation.
It's been a place that inspires creativity
with all of the people here, many of them here,
that are thinking about the future
and how do we create the future.
And so in terms of thinking
about the future of genome editing,
I really want to be working to ensure
that we make this technology
widely available and accessible.
And the question is, how do we do that?
And I feel that it's very important
to be working in the context of a nonprofit, which we are,
but also partnering as much as we can
with all kinds of companies, entrepreneurs,
investors, various stakeholders,
to build the technology of the future
that will enable, at some point in the future,
a sickle cell patient to receive a one-time injection,
maybe even that's a pill at some point that they take,
that is curative of their disease.
And today that sounds a little bit fantastical,
but I think it's very achievable.
And we have some concrete ways
that we're working towards that goal
at the Innovative Genomics Institute
to make sure that it becomes a reality.
Can you elaborate on that? I can.
So one of the big challenges right now
I think with CRISPR, and you alluded to it,
is how we deliver the CRISPR editors into cells,
how do we get them into a patient?
And today that's being done primarily by an approach
that for sickle cell disease, for example,
involves taking stem cells from a patient.
These are cells that are the progenitors
of our blood supplies, our blood cells,
editing them in the laboratory,
and then putting them back into a patient.
But we imagine a day when we don't have to do that,
that we actually have a tool
that will allow us to target the CRISPR molecules directly
to the cells that need editing in the body.
And we're doing this in a variety of ways
at the Innovative Genomics Institute,
but one of them involves taking the machinery
that viruses use to infect specific types of cells,
gutting that machinery
of all of the viral replication DNA,
so that you don't have a replicating virus,
but using the delivery vehicle
to deliver CRISPR molecules in a way that we can program
so we can program the vehicle
to go to the cells where editing is needed.
I think this is a very exciting future direction
of the field and something that will offer,
we hope, in the future patients the opportunity
to get a CRISPR therapy in a much more affordable fashion.
So let's bring it back to today.
And you mentioned the price of this sickle cell therapy,
the one that was just approved in the UK,
Vertex and CRISPR Therapeutics,
they have not announced a price for this therapy yet,
but as you mentioned, Dr. Doudna,
there are estimates that this could be upwards
of two to $3 million.
There are a lot of patients with sickle cell
in the US, over 100,000,
although not all those, of course, will be eligible
or may want this therapy.
But for those that do,
as a society, how do we make sure that these people
are going to be able to get this treatment?
I think one important conversation that needs to happen
is that we need to be working with payers,
insurance companies,
to understand how do you think about paying
for a therapy like this?
As we've been discussing,
ideally it's a one-and-done treatment
that cures somebody of a disease
that would otherwise recur over the course of their life,
which is obviously, you know, very, very expensive
to think about all of the hospitalizations,
blood transfusions, other kinds of treatments they need,
plus the economic impact on their ability to work,
and to support their family, to contribute to societies,
it's a huge cost.
And so I think that's a very important conversation
that, you know, is starting,
and needs to happen I think more intensively now
that CRISPR therapies are a reality.
This is a disease that mainly affects people
of African descent.
And it's a disease that scientists
have been studying for a long time
and have known the biological mechanisms behind,
since what, the 1950s I think?
It's taken a long time to get to this point
where we have a potential genetic cure for these people.
What do you think it's going to mean
for the patient community
to have something like this that is so revolutionary,
that could change the lives of so many people?
One of the things I'm excited about is that this is,
as you said, this is a therapy that's helping people
that have been traditionally not treated very well
by the medical community,
and so I think that's very appropriate.
I think it's very inspiring.
I really salute patients
that have been willing to go into these early trials,
that requires extraordinary bravery and willingness,
you know, to try something that's truly experimental.
But I also think they're blazing a trail for many others,
because the hope is that this will be the first
of many opportunities to use CRISPR
not only for rare genetic diseases,
but also for conditions that affect many more people.
And there are already pretty advanced clinical trials
that are looking into ways
to affect diseases of the liver,
but also to think about preventive medicine in the future.
So if we really wanna, you know, be futuristic
about where genome editing is headed,
I think that in the longer term
we're going to see applications that allow us
to protect ourselves from diseases
that we might be susceptible to due to our genetics.
And, on that note, let's shift to CRISPR's uses
in other areas of medicine.
So a biotech company called Editas Medicine
was developing a CRISPR treatment
for a rare type of inherited blindness
that it ended up benefiting I think one patient,
she had really good results,
but then it failed in the other patients
in this clinical trial.
What do you think that tells us
about the limitations of CRISPR?
Well, I think it tells us that in that trial
they were working with patients
who had very advanced disease of the eye
where it may have been too late in a way
for a genome editing technology,
or at least the way it was administered to them,
to be effective.
So, honestly, I don't think we can conclude anything
about CRISPR itself from that example.
I think it's more of a statement about the way
we need to think about treating diseases.
When we're talking about a genetic therapy,
we need to think about it from the perspective of,
what time points in the disease pathway
will this kind of approach be effective?
You mentioned this a little bit earlier
about the question of how to deliver CRISPR.
So I was hoping you could elaborate on this a bit
about what are the barriers
to applying CRISPR to other diseases?
I'm thinking about neurological diseases
when you're thinking about putting CRISPR in the brain,
or organs that are not necessarily easy to get to.
How do we edit those parts of the body?
Well, it's a big challenge, Emily, that's for sure.
I think when we think about putting CRISPR into the brain,
we face the same challenges
that any kind of neurological therapy faces,
which is that it's very hard to get molecules
across what's called the blood-brain barrier.
So with CRISPR today, what's happening is that people
are using a physical approach to do that.
So you can do injections that cross the blood-brain barrier
and introduce CRISPR molecules
into particular parts of the brain.
And, in fact, I was at a meeting yesterday
where I was reviewing some data
from a scientist at Ohio State University.
He also has an appointment here at UCSF in the city
that allows targeting
of particular parts of the brain
with various kinds of molecules,
he wasn't using CRISPR, but, in theory, one could,
and seeing amazing effects on patients
that have really devastating neurological disorders.
So I think that, again, thinking about the future,
which is a theme of this meeting,
it's really exciting to think about the opportunities
to target genes that make people susceptible
to neurological disease,
Alzheimer's, neurodegenerative disease,
I think these are very important areas
of focus in the future with genome editing.
You're working on a new initiative
around using CRISPR to edit the microbiome.
What diseases might be treated that way
and why the microbiome?
Well, let's start with what is the microbiome?
The microbiome is the collection of microbes
that populate our bodies, our planet.
They affect really everything
about our health and our environment.
And what's really interesting with CRISPR is that,
as I mentioned earlier,
it's a technology that came from microbes.
And so what we're trying to do now
is to use CRISPR at its source,
going back into those microbes,
but not doing it traditionally the way scientists
have investigated one type of bacteria at a time,
but to really think about how we can edit whole populations
of microbes in their native environment.
And in terms of the impact there,
why would we want to do this?
There's increasing evidence that our own microbiome,
the microbiome that lives in the human gut,
affects a lot of the health and disease impacts
that we experience over the course of our lifetime.
And so we think that in the future it will be possible
to use CRISPR to fine tune that microbiome
so that it either doesn't produce disease-causing molecules
or does produce molecules that improve our health.
And in the environment, we have a project with folks
up at the University of California, Davis,
to impact the production of methane
by microbiome populations that live in cattle.
And you may know that methane
is one of the most powerful of the greenhouse gases.
So being able to reduce or even eliminate methane production
by cattle would actually have an enormous impact globally
on greenhouse gas production.
So we're actively working on this in the laboratory
to make sure that the technology is effective.
And then, of course, very importantly,
with our institute partnering
with farmers in other countries
to begin educating them about this technology
and, ultimately, to help them
begin to deploy it when it's ready.
So would this involve swallowing a liquid probiotic
with CRISPR molecules in it?
Or what exactly are you imagining?
Could be that, yeah, this is one of the things
we're researching right now,
is what is the best way to deliver,
again, this back to this question of delivery,
how do we deliver the genome editors into the microbiome?
And one of the approaches
that could be very interesting actually,
is using the viruses that infect bacteria to deliver CRISPR
back into a particular species of microbes,
so that's something we're exploring.
So, as you alluded to before,
there are several CRISPR therapies
being tested in clinical trials right now for HIV,
cancer, a hereditary form of high cholesterol.
What are you most excited
about when you look out at the CRISPR landscape?
Well, I'm certainly excited about expanding opportunities
to help people with rare disease.
I think that's very important.
It's an area that most traditional pharmaceutical companies
don't focus on, because it doesn't offer
the kind of economic payout that they might be looking for.
And yet, if we look collectively at people
affected by rare diseases, it's a large number.
And so the opportunity with CRISPR
is that because of its programmable nature,
once we understand how to use it for one disease,
we can, we hope, reprogram it fairly readily
to use the same molecules for a different disease.
And so I think that's one application that I'm very excited
about and is a focus of the Innovative Genomics Institute.
And then, of course, we already spoke
about the opportunities in climate change
with methane production.
And I think there are huge opportunities
in agriculture more broadly that, frankly,
many of us will experience, I think, CRISPR in our lives
in the agricultural world
before we might experience it clinically.
We could have a whole other conversation about that.
And I wanted to ask you to do a little bit
of a prediction for my last question.
And because you just mentioned
about people's lives being touched by CRISPR,
if you could look out into the audience
and give me a sense of, in 10, 20 years,
how many people out there will get a CRISPR treatment
in their lifetime?
Hmm, that's a hard question.
I think in 10 to 20 years, if you're talking
about somebody receiving an actual CRISPR therapy,
it's probably gonna be still a relatively small number.
I think that by a decade or more from now though,
most of us will be experiencing CRISPR in our lives
through the food that we eat,
through the environmental impacts that we're able to deploy
with CRISPR to reduce greenhouse gas emissions.
I think that will be the more broad global impact
in the near term.
Well, thank you so much, Dr. Doudna, for joining us.
This has been a great conversation.
Thanks a lot, Emily. Thank you.
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