They were the poster animals for the gene-editing revolution, appearing in story after story.
By adding just a few letters of DNA to the genomes of dairy cattle, a
US startup company had devised a way to make sure the animals never grew
troublesome horns. To
Recombinetics—the St. Paul, Minnesota gene-editing company that made
the hornless cattle—the animals were messengers of a new era of better,
faster, molecular farming. “This
same outcome could be achieved by breeding in the farmyard,” declared
the company's then-CEO Tammy Lee Stanoch in 2017. “This is precision
breeding.”Except it wasn’t.
Food and Drug Administration scientists who had a closer look at the genome sequence of one of the edited animals, a bull named Buri, have discovered its genome contains a stretch of bacterial DNA including a gene conferring antibiotic resistance...MORE
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