News Feature in 2005

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  • Desperate patients are travelling abroad for dubious stem cell therapies. Monya Baker investigates the potential damage not only to human lives but to reputable stem cell research.

    • Monya Baker
    News Feature
  • Just three months after the results of two innovative and potentially cost-effective sequencing technologies were announced, one instrument has been launched on the market. Does this mean the $1,000 genome may be within sight? Jim Kling investigates.

    • Jim Kling
    News Feature
  • Deep-sea prospecting is unveiling bizarre species of microbes that already are providing new sources of industrial enzymes, and could be a source of novel therapeutics. Will the lack of treaties governing activities in international waters compromise the commercial potential of the ocean's largesse? Cormac Sheridan investigates.

    • Cormac Sheridan
    News Feature
  • Industry hopes to build on recent successes of monoclonal antibodies in oncology and inflammatory disease. But evidence is mounting that the exquisite selectivity and binding capacity of these therapeutics can have unwanted side effects, particularly in autoimmune disease. Christopher Thomas Scott investigates.

    • Christopher Thomas Scott
    News Feature
  • A decade of sound science and aggressive deal making has given Sangamo Biosciences a stranglehold on zinc finger technologies. Now, academic labs that helped build Sangamo's empire want in on the action. Are the ingredients ripe for a revolt that could break the company's monopoly? Christopher Thomas Scott investigates.

    • Christopher Thomas Scott
    News Feature
  • Against long odds, conventional wisdom and politics, efforts to commercialize stem cell research are underway and show signs of intelligent life. Stephan Herrera investigates.

    • Stephan Herrera
    News Feature
  • Genetically engineered bacteria made biotech drugs possible. Now, they are becoming drugs in their own right, Monya Baker reports.

    • Monya Baker
    News Feature
  • Can gene therapy ever live down its setbacks and live up to its initial promise? A chastened but determined group of pioneers believes it can, and they are pointing to a new generation of products to back up that claim.

    • Malorye A. Branca
    News Feature
  • Surging numbers of therapeutic proteins and small molecules, rationally designed to trigger cell death, are entering the clinic against cancer. In theory, they should provide an entirely new kind of targeted therapy, but troubling questions of basic biology remain.

    • Ken Garber
    News Feature
  • Biotech animals don't have the market value of biotech drugs and potential controversies loom large, but genetic screening technologies are already finding a market, and both cloned and transgenic animals may soon be on the menu. Alan Dove reports.

    • Alan W Dove
    News Feature
  • With the Kyoto treaty demanding reductions in greenhouse gases and the loss of forests outpacing their renewal by natural means, could it be time to start planting genetically engineered forests? Stephan Herrera investigates.

    • Stephan Herrera
    News Feature