Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- The Mutant Timeline
- Prologue : The World On Notice
- 1 I’m Quite Glad That I Wasn’T First
- 2 The China Dream
- 3 The Best Humans haven't been Produced Yet
- 4 Winner Takes All
- 5 Look at those Muscles, Look at that Butt
- 6 A Moral Choice
- 7 Will I have to Mortgage My House?
- 8 The Cancer Moonshot
- 9 Free Health Care for All
- 10 Silence = Death
- 11 Immortality has to be the Goal
- 12 I don't want to Walk. I want to Fly
- 13 High-Quality Children
- 14 #Transracial
- 15 American Medicine and only for You
- 16 He was Busy, Busy. Always doing Research
- 17 A Hammer, Looking for a Nail
- 18 Beautiful Lies
- 19 Two Healthy Baby Girls?
- 20 Mixed Wisdom
- 21 They are Moving Forward
- 22 Chinese Scientists are Creating Crispr Babies
- 23 Bubbles Vanishing into Air
- 24 The Hourse has Already Bolted
- Epilogue: We have Never Been Human
- Acknowledgments
- Notes
- Index
19 - Two Healthy Baby Girls?
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 18 December 2021
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- The Mutant Timeline
- Prologue : The World On Notice
- 1 I’m Quite Glad That I Wasn’T First
- 2 The China Dream
- 3 The Best Humans haven't been Produced Yet
- 4 Winner Takes All
- 5 Look at those Muscles, Look at that Butt
- 6 A Moral Choice
- 7 Will I have to Mortgage My House?
- 8 The Cancer Moonshot
- 9 Free Health Care for All
- 10 Silence = Death
- 11 Immortality has to be the Goal
- 12 I don't want to Walk. I want to Fly
- 13 High-Quality Children
- 14 #Transracial
- 15 American Medicine and only for You
- 16 He was Busy, Busy. Always doing Research
- 17 A Hammer, Looking for a Nail
- 18 Beautiful Lies
- 19 Two Healthy Baby Girls?
- 20 Mixed Wisdom
- 21 They are Moving Forward
- 22 Chinese Scientists are Creating Crispr Babies
- 23 Bubbles Vanishing into Air
- 24 The Hourse has Already Bolted
- Epilogue: We have Never Been Human
- Acknowledgments
- Notes
- Index
Summary
“Gene surgery and regular IVF actually aren't too different,” says embryologist Dr. Jinzhou Qin on the He laboratory's YouTube channel. Beakers and other laboratory equipment are visible in the background as he walks through the relatively simple steps. “In a regular IVF lab we usually start by retrieving eggs,” Qin explains, “and care for the embryos for three to six days before finally returning them to mom.” As the camera cuts to a microscope with two long needles pointing into a shallow dish, he continues: “Very simply, right after we inject sperm, we use another fine needle to inject the fertilized egg with CRISPR-Cas9 and instructions for surgery.” Maneuvering a joystick and spinning a knob brings the needles close to the egg in the dish. Under the microscope viewers see an iconic image of IVF. One of the needles has a blunt tip, and a gentle suction holds the egg tight. The other needle, smaller and sharp, penetrates the egg. As Qin places the dish in an incubator, a machine that looks a lot like a microwave oven, he says, “By the time the fertilized egg becomes three or four cells, the gene surgery is already finished.”
Another YouTube video outlines some ethical principles for gene surgery with CRISPR. Dr. He says it should be used “only for serious disease, never fantasy.” Setting himself apart from some of the individuals and institutions supporting his research, he says: “We should not use it for increasing IQ, improving sports performance, or changing skin color.” Another video explains why he chose CCR5, saying that the safety of working with CCR5 is supported by “decades of clinical trials.” He does not mention Sangamo by name, nor the pioneering HIV-positive activists in San Francisco, but claims that he was inspired by “the first gene-editing trial in the United States.” Resistance to HIV would have “real-world medical value,” he declares. Perhaps the experiment would actualize a big dream shared by people all over the world: a cure for the deadly virus.
Some of Dr. He's claims in these videos are misleading. In his signature announcement to the world on YouTube, he says: “Two beautiful little Chinese girls, named Lulu and Nana, came crying into the world as healthy as any other babies.”
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- The Mutant ProjectInside the Global Race to Genetically Modify Humans, pp. 206 - 215Publisher: Bristol University PressPrint publication year: 2021