Emmanuelle Charpentier (#NobelPrize Laureate) - #WomenInScience Change the World
The #NobelPrize in Chemistry has been awarded 112 times to 186 Nobel Laureates.
7 of them are women.
Jennifer Doudna & Emmanuelle Charpentier, 2020 Chemistry Laureates, showed us that #WomenInScience change the world.
"My wish is that this will provide a positive message to the young girls who would like to follow the path of science & to show them that #WomenInScience can also have an impact."
Say it out loud so all girls can hear #NobelPrize winner Emmanuelle Charpentier's words of wisdom!
http://on.unesco.org/2SwtBmo
Produced by @UNESCO
Twitter: @4womeninscience
Facebook: @forwomeninscience
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Emmanuelle Charpentier and Jennifer A. Doudna will receive the 2020 Nobel Prize in Chemistry for discovering one of gene technology’s sharpest tools: the CRISPR/Cas9 genetic scissors. Professor Emmanuelle Charpentier, 2016 L’Oréal-UNESCO For Women in Science Laureate for Europe and Professor Jennifer Doudna, 2016 L’Oréal-UNESCO For Women in Science Laureate for North America, each contributed key insights to the development of this ground breaking new technology that has set the scientific world on fire, reinventing genetic research and making it possible to perform microsurgery on DNA, the genetic material of plants, animals and humans. Working in collaboration, the two researchers discovered an easy way to alter any organism’s DNA. Known as CRISPR-Cas9, this genome editing technique enables scientists to remove and add pieces of genetic material with exquisite precision. It can be used to disable genes, correct genetic disorders or to insert genes to create animal models of human disease.
We are only just beginning to grasp the full impact of this extraordinary new technology. The CRISPR-Cas9 complex is able to home in on a matching sequence with extraordinary precision. It opens completely new possibilities in gene therapy, cell therapy and immunotherapy. It opens new fields in agriculture and biotechnology. It offers new means of developing medicines. It offers the possibility of removing faulty disease-causing DNA, for instance in cells in the lungs of children affected with cystic fibrosis or the muscles of those with some forms of muscular dystrophy. It has already been used to save the life of a child with an incurable form of leukaemia and to improve the sight of patients suffering from retinitis Pigmentosa, a genetic eye disease. And there is much, much more to come.
Видео Emmanuelle Charpentier (#NobelPrize Laureate) - #WomenInScience Change the World канала United Nations
7 of them are women.
Jennifer Doudna & Emmanuelle Charpentier, 2020 Chemistry Laureates, showed us that #WomenInScience change the world.
"My wish is that this will provide a positive message to the young girls who would like to follow the path of science & to show them that #WomenInScience can also have an impact."
Say it out loud so all girls can hear #NobelPrize winner Emmanuelle Charpentier's words of wisdom!
http://on.unesco.org/2SwtBmo
Produced by @UNESCO
Twitter: @4womeninscience
Facebook: @forwomeninscience
------
Emmanuelle Charpentier and Jennifer A. Doudna will receive the 2020 Nobel Prize in Chemistry for discovering one of gene technology’s sharpest tools: the CRISPR/Cas9 genetic scissors. Professor Emmanuelle Charpentier, 2016 L’Oréal-UNESCO For Women in Science Laureate for Europe and Professor Jennifer Doudna, 2016 L’Oréal-UNESCO For Women in Science Laureate for North America, each contributed key insights to the development of this ground breaking new technology that has set the scientific world on fire, reinventing genetic research and making it possible to perform microsurgery on DNA, the genetic material of plants, animals and humans. Working in collaboration, the two researchers discovered an easy way to alter any organism’s DNA. Known as CRISPR-Cas9, this genome editing technique enables scientists to remove and add pieces of genetic material with exquisite precision. It can be used to disable genes, correct genetic disorders or to insert genes to create animal models of human disease.
We are only just beginning to grasp the full impact of this extraordinary new technology. The CRISPR-Cas9 complex is able to home in on a matching sequence with extraordinary precision. It opens completely new possibilities in gene therapy, cell therapy and immunotherapy. It opens new fields in agriculture and biotechnology. It offers new means of developing medicines. It offers the possibility of removing faulty disease-causing DNA, for instance in cells in the lungs of children affected with cystic fibrosis or the muscles of those with some forms of muscular dystrophy. It has already been used to save the life of a child with an incurable form of leukaemia and to improve the sight of patients suffering from retinitis Pigmentosa, a genetic eye disease. And there is much, much more to come.
Видео Emmanuelle Charpentier (#NobelPrize Laureate) - #WomenInScience Change the World канала United Nations
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How CRISPR lets us edit our DNA | Jennifer DoudnaEmmanuelle Charpentier | Chemie-Nobelpreis 2020 | Pressekonferenz Livestream-Mitschnitt2015 Breakthrough Prize: Jennifer Doudna, Emmanuelle Charpentier, Dick Costolo, Cameron DiazBiologist Explains One Concept in 5 Levels of Difficulty - CRISPR | WIREDUnited Nations - LIVEJames Peebles, Nobel Prize in Physics 2019: Official interviewLIVE: Scientist Emmanuelle Charpentier reacts after winning the 2020 Nobel Prize in ChemistryGene editing can now change an entire species -- forever | Jennifer KahnKazuo Ishiguro, Nobel Prize in Literature 2017: Official interviewNobel Prize lecture: Benjamin List, Nobel Prize in chemistry 2021How CRISPR lets you edit DNA - Andrea M. HenleHow simple ideas lead to scientific discoveries10 New Insights in Climate Science | #COP26 | Climate actionEmmanuelle Charpentier founder of the CRISPR-Cas9 gene editing technologyJennifer Doudna on the curiosity of a childNobel Prize in Physics: Rainer Weiss (FULL PRESS CONFERENCE)Nobel Lecture: Emmanuelle Charpentier, Nobel Prize in Chemistry 2020Inside a CRISPR LabNobel Prize laureate Emmanuelle Charpentier talks with students. United by Science event2021 Nobel Prize award ceremony