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A fast-moving future for gene-edited foods - West Central Tribune
In a gleaming laboratory hidden from the highway by a Hampton Inn and a Denny's restaurant, a researcher with the biotech firm Calyxt works the controls of a boxy robot.
The robot whirs like an arcade claw machine, dropping blips of DNA into tubes with pipettes. It's building an enzyme that rewrites DNA - and transforming food and agriculture in the process.
Thanks to a cutting-edge technology called gene editing, scientists can now turn plant genes "on" and "off" almost as easily as Calyxt scientists flip a switch to illuminate the rows of tender soybean plants growing in their lab.
In a gleaming laboratory hidden from the highway by a Hampton Inn and a Denny's restaurant, a researcher with the biotech firm Calyxt works the controls of a boxy robot.
The robot whirs like an arcade claw machine, dropping blips of DNA into tubes with pipettes. It's building an enzyme that rewrites DNA - and transforming food and agriculture in the process.
Thanks to a cutting-edge technology called gene editing, scientists can now turn plant genes "on" and "off" almost as easily as Calyxt scientists flip a switch to illuminate the rows of tender soybean plants growing in their lab.