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Biography & Autobiography. Science. Nonfiction. HTML:A Best Book of 2021 by Bloomberg BusinessWeek, Time, and The Washington Post The bestselling author of Leonardo da Vinci and Steve Jobs returns with a "compelling" (The Washington Post) account of how Nobel Prize winner Jennifer Doudna and her colleagues launched a revolution that will allow us to cure diseases, fend off viruses, and have healthier babies. When Jennifer Doudna was in sixth grade, she came home one day to find that her dad had left a paperback titled The Double Helix on her bed. She put it aside, thinking it was one of those detective tales she loved. When she read it on a rainy Saturday, she discovered she was right, in a way. As she sped through the pages, she became enthralled by the intense drama behind the competition to discover the code of life. Even though her high school counselor told her girls didn't become scientists, she decided she would. Driven by a passion to understand how nature works and to turn discoveries into inventions, she would help to make what the book's author, James Watson, told her was the most important biological advance since his codiscovery of the structure of DNA. She and her collaborators turned a curiosity of nature into an invention that will transform the human race: an easy-to-use tool that can edit DNA. Known as CRISPR, it opened a brave new world of medical miracles and moral questions. The development of CRISPR and the race to create vaccines for coronavirus will hasten our transition to the next great innovation revolution. The past half-century has been a digital age, based on the microchip, computer, and internet. Now we are entering a life-science revolution. Children who study digital coding will be joined by those who study genetic code. Should we use our new evolution-hacking powers to make us less susceptible to viruses? What a wonderful boon that would be! And what about preventing depression? Hmmm...Should we allow parents, if they can afford it, to enhance the height or muscles or IQ of their kids? After helping to discover CRISPR, Doudna became a leader in wrestling with these moral issues and, with her collaborator Emmanuelle Charpentier, won the Nobel Prize in 2020. Her story is an "enthralling detective story" (Oprah Daily) that involves the most profound wonders of nature, from the origins of life to the future of our species.… (more)
User reviews
The story of how, over a period of several decades, Doudna and her colleagues discovered the features of DNA and, especially, RNA that allowed them to understand how these enzymes work, and especially the way that RNA is effective in actually cutting to pieces the DNA of invaders like viruses, is fascinating indeed, and Isaacson tells the story very well. He's adept at providing just enough of the technical description of the processes involved to give a lay reader enough of a general idea of what's going on without getting bogged down in too much detail. I actually experienced an element of "willing suspension of disbelief" during the proceedings that I found wholly appropriate. It was fascinating for me to learn, for example, that the genetic techniques being studied and applied by humans now are essentially the same ones that bacteria have been using to fight off viruses for billions of years.
Isaacson stops about 65% of the way through the book to provide an overview of the ethical questions being wrestled with by the scientific world over the issues that our increasingly effective ability to edit our genetic makeup has brought forward. Do we want "designer humans?" What might the unintended consequences be of altering our genetic makeup? How drastically will the ability to genetically enhance or protect our children exacerbate financial and class inequality, as parents with money begin accessing techniques that poorer parents cannot? On the other hand, shall we stop short of curing genetic diseases such as sickle cell anemia, or protecting our children from AIDS by altering their DNA? The line in the sand, if you will, is between the ability to provide genetic treatments to individuals to treat or cure genetic conditions from which they're suffering, versus editing a person's overall genetic makeup in a way that will be passed down to their offspring, and thereby affect the species as a whole.
Isaacson describes the question thusly:
"The primary concern is germline editing, those changes that are done in the DNA of human eggs or sperm or early-stage embryos so that every cell in the resulting children--and also of their descendants--will carry the edited trait. There has already been, and rightly so, general acceptance of what is known as somatic editing, the changes that are made in targeted cells of a living patient and do not affect reproductiive cells. If something goes wrong in one of these therapies, it can be disastrous for the patient but not for the species."
And then, as Isaacson was doing his obviously years-long research for this biography, the Covid pandemic hit. The final section of the book describes the ways in which the academic scientific community quickly swung into action, cooperating in areas that would have been sources of competition previously, to create the new sort of vaccines--utilizing RNA manipulation for the first time in vaccine technology--that we are now using to combat Covid.
Isaacson does not skip over the fact that, when Doudna was a young woman deciding upon a career, the idea that "women can be scientists" was one that met stiff resistance within the world of science and in the culture in general. Her role as a pioneer, not among the very first women scientists, of course, but in the vanguard of the generation that battered down many (certainly not all) of the roadblocks taken for granted by previous generations, is stressed, as is her role as a mentor.
There is a lot more in this rich and fertile book, which is at once a biography of a fascinating woman, a primer for how science and private industry inter-relate in our society, a history of the science of genetics, a look inside the war against Covid, and an outline of the ethical/philosophical questions that we are going to be grappling with over these new capabilities.
Last little complaint, Isaacson twice in the book refers to viruses “worming their way” into cells. My understanding is that viruses have absolutely no ability to move themselves, let alone any ability to “worm” their way into anything. They are merely little packets of DNA or RNA and some proteins. If they happen to end up on the surface of a cell, then the cell can be “tricked” by features of the exterior part of the virus. Basically the cell is fooled into actually pulling the virus into the cell through the cell wall as if it were some valuable nutrient. The virus can’t *do* anything on its own, all the “action” is performed by the cells themselves.
It’s the biography of Nobel winning scientist Jennifer Doudna, but it’s also the story of CRISPR a revolutionary system that now takes human genome editing out of the realm of
Since the beginning of bacterial genomic sequencing decades ago, scientists saw that bacterial DNA has repeating sections. These were a puzzle and were often theorized to be repeats of important genes or merely leftover nonsense sequences to provide spacing between genes.
But the utterly astounding truth was that these repeats were being used by bacteria to remember and destroy viruses that had previously attacked them. Bacteria - single celled organisms without a nucleus - had devised a way of remembering and fending off attackers and created the elegant beginnings of an immune system.
These became known as CRISPR - Clustered regularly interspaced short palindromic repeats.
This discovery was first used to fend off viruses that attacked valuable bacterial yogurt cultures.
But as research progressed, scientists realized that CRISPR provided a tool that could target specific genes in any species.
Combined with genes that would make the CRISPR tools pass through the human nucleus, human DNA itself could be targeted and changed.
This was demonstrated in somatic cells – cells that circulate and replicate but would not have their changed DNA passed on to offspring of the treated patient. It was a cure for sickle cell anemia – but at a price tag of over a million dollars per patient.
There was, however, a line that researchers didn’t want to cross – making changes in germline cells; changes to these cells in the very early developments of embryos would ensure that the offspring of the patients would also have the changes.
And then, a Chinese researcher, He Jiankui, crossed that line. He performed in vitro fertilization and then edited the genomes of the embryos. The edited targeted gene, CCR5, codes for a protein that HIV uses to enter cells. The resulting twin girls would no longer succumb to the virus that causes AIDS. It was done imperfectly; one twin only had the genetic change on one of her two chromosomes. Both girls’ bodies had a mosaic of immune and non-immune cells suggesting it was done at a slightly too late stage of embryonic development.
But the genie was out of the bottle – it had been demonstrated that the human genome was able to be freed of disease causing genes and enhanced with genes that humans see as more desirable.
All of this invokes a huge number of moral and ethical questions. Gene editing has passed from the age of science fiction and into reality. There is now a way to make targeted changes to rewrite the human genome. It’s no longer ‘Could we?’ but ‘should we?’ and even “How can we possibly prevent the next steps”? It may not even be possible to regulate this new form of genetic engineering which could create a form of ‘genetic engineering tourism’ as cash rich patients seek relatively simple procedures in cash strapped countries.
Unfortunately, it also opened the door to a set of CRISPR biological weapons which would literally edit human DNA – followed closely by an industry of anti-CRSPR counter weapons to offset such attacks.
Then came the Corona Virus – an RNA virus that was sweeping through humanity. A large consortium of scientists working on various aspects of CRISPR throughout many nations, gathered together via remote technology to brainstorm how CRISPR could effectively help. CRISPR knowledge had given them many new tools to understand and work with viral mRNA.
Their first focus was using CRISPR tools for testing for the Covid-19 gene presence in human samples.
A second question became using the RNA tools to deliver the critical portion of the virus’s protein to the nuclei of patients’ cells. As viral RNA does, this portion of the viral mRNA would temporarily take over the hosts’s DNA to produce the spike protein – and alert the host’s cells that an intruder needed to be eliminated. Enter the highly successful mRNA vaccines.
Ongoing CRISPR investigations may produce more therapeutics to fight the virus in patients.
And of course, there’s the question of whether the human genome could (or even should) be rewritten to block Covid and other Corona viruses from entering the cell at all.
Read this book. The door of the future has been opened and this is the sweeping technology that will be there.
If you have a background in science or genetics, the first section of this 500 page book will read like a detective novel. If you have less background and find this first section overwhelming, skim through or skip it and go onwards. You’ll be glad you did.
Subtitle: Jennifer Doudna, Gene Editing, and the Future of the Human Race
This is an engaging, interesting, informative, and thought-provoking biography cum history. While the focus is on Jennifer Doudna, Isaacson gives almost equal time to the many
The book starts out with basic biographical background, moves into the excitement of discovery and the international race to obtain patents, and to publish first, then on to ethical questions surrounding the application of new technologies, and finally focuses on the ways that these teams of scientists worked to address COVID19.
Isaacson frequently puts himself into the narrative, writing in first person about his encounters and reactions.
The audiobook is narrated by Kathe Mazur, with an introduction and epilogue narrated by Isaacson. I was happy that I had the text handy because there are times when reading a passage helped me understand the science better than listening to it. But Mazur is a very talented voice artist, and she really did a magnificent job.
Walter Isaacson usually writes biographies. This isn't one. At least, it isn't one of
I loved learning about the epochal battle between bacteria and virus that led to CRISPR and it's adaptation by skilled researchers. I was fascinated by the background of the vaccines for COVID-19 and the companies that developed them.
I enjoyed the human aspect of Doudna's background and her personal connections with Emmanuelle Charpentier and the other scientists that led to the ability to manipulate genetic codes. Isaacson gives credit to many scientists in the course of the book, and many of their stories are arresting.
I didn't enjoy the parts of the book that focused on the completion to publish first and patent first, or the private companies that were set up to monetize the research.
All in all, I learned things, and while wading through boring chapters wasn't fun, the book is worth your time – the print version, which you can skim.
I am a business person, not a scientist, and this was so interesting and current with our times that I feel I now
Wow, I didn't like this book nearly as much as others, apparently. Or maybe it's just I don't like how human pettiness and emotions ruin everything. The book was a lot of relationship description and that could have been shorter in my one-persons opinion. I just don't care to
So... I guess, recommend for those that like a lot of personal drama with their discoveries? Just not me
This book seemed obviously rushed to press. Isaacson took a fascinating subject, the science behind gene editing using discoveries made while studying RNA, and makes the science secondary to a
This is too bad, because it's a fascinating topic, and Isaacson certainly could have included a focus on the scientists in addition to describing the science, but it just wasn't executed well. I would have been thrilled to read a good biography of a woman scientist, but even Jennifer Doudna, who gets a nod in the title, doesn't get a deep enough attention in the book to satisfy my curiosity.
I was hoping for a science book in the vein of [The Gene] by [[Siddhartha Mukherjee]] and this comes no where close. I felt this was rushed to publish because the science was used in creating the mRNA covid vaccines.
The book gets a lot of high ratings on LT and elsewhere, but I didn't see it.
Original publication date: 2021
Author’s nationality: American
Original language: English
Length: 552 pages
Rating: 2 stars
Format/where I acquired the book: library kindle book
Why I read this: interested in the topic
It's also an interesting
It wasn't science-y enough for me. When I read books about science, I want to feel like I can do whatever the subject is (even though I know I
It wasn't enough about Doudna's life. I would have enjoyed a more personal book about her life (especially since she is still with us) than about her career.
A full timeline of everything and everyone involved would have been nice if it took place in chronological order, so we could see the coincidental comings together of ideas.
There's other stuff like this, but overall, I found the book to be a slog. But it probably did what it set out to do adequately.
While the other three titles I've read have been biographies of long-deceased people, this one was only partly a biography. It was also about how science
To me, the most interesting parts of the book dealt with the moral issues. I was also interested in the unexpected consequences of the COVID pandemic in that it created an environment for great collaboration among universities and other researchers.
As I finished the book, I couldn't help but speculate that, not that long ago, the entire text would have been the basis for a sci-fi novel.
Doudna was inspired as a teenager to become a scientist by reading Watson’s The Double Helix. Like any scientist, she had to persevere along her path, but she eventually earned a PhD from Harvard University en route to a professorship at UC-Berkeley. She found a professional niche in learning everything about RNA. As explained here, through conversations with Charpentier and work by post-doctoral fellows, she eventually developed a way to edit genes.
However, this discovery only invited controversy. The two labs had co-discovered how to do this in bacteria, but could they do this in humans? Other labs began to pursue this question, too, and two groups claim legal priority in this discovery. The courts may decide who will get the money, but the Nobel committee clearly decided that this all-female duo deserved preeminence. Isaacson, a careful writer with a long history of describing innovation, maintains an unbiased tone when dissecting this dilemma.
Ultimately, this book might prove to be the equivalent of The Double Helix for a new generation of scientists, both male and female. It presents Doudna as a noble figure who studies interesting and impactful things. It also presents a host of postdoctoral workers and collaborators who deservedly find their own place in the scientific folklore. Isaacson, though a historian and biographer – not a scientist – never scrimps on the science. He lucidly and accurately describes the biochemical happenings without over-complexifying or over-simplifying.
This book should receive a broad audience among the reading public. As this book repeatedly trumpets, the life sciences are carrying the banner of innovation in the early twenty-first century. Thus, it behooves everyone to learn how to import its insights into our personal lives. Isaacson writes with clarity and vibrancy enough for the general reader, who may not have an advanced scientific education. He also gives readers a taste of how the structure of American science works by providing glimpses into the labs and administrations. Thus, future scientists can learn how science actually works. Many can, have, and will benefit from Isaacson’s explanation of Doudna and company’s labors, and as with CRISPR, benefits will roll in during coming years.
Walter Isaacson, whose name may be familiar from his best-selling biography of Steve Jobs, turns his attention to biotechnology in The Code Breaker. Doudna is the main character threaded throughout, but many other scientists, both collaborators and competitors, are introduced as Isaacson painstakingly traces the history of CRISPR research and ethics, and finally turns his attention to its impact in coronavirus testing and vaccines just this past year. He draws on many interviews and interestingly inserts himself in the story, sometimes telling the reader where he comes down on a particular ethical issue, or describing his own involvement in a conference or vaccine trial. It gets pretty technical and left my head spinning at times, despite the fact that I've taken a college-level genetics course (though that was over a decade ago, before this technology was viable). But it's a fascinating account, and one I'd recommend to anyone interested in genetics or women in science.
I found the tone a little off, a little gossipy. I didn't enjoy reading speculation about what one extraordinarily gifted woman scientist thought about her also extraordinarily gifted woman collaborator. I think some of the dramatics that were introduced took away from the great work done by the different labs. And I feel strongly that people, including scientists, are not so venal as the author wants us to think -- and I think, again, this is for dramatic purpose not reality. To make it more "interesting."
See this review: https://issues.org/code-breaker-doudna-isaacson-bhalla-review/