<code id='F4CD7F5F46'></code><style id='F4CD7F5F46'></style>
    • <acronym id='F4CD7F5F46'></acronym>
      <center id='F4CD7F5F46'><center id='F4CD7F5F46'><tfoot id='F4CD7F5F46'></tfoot></center><abbr id='F4CD7F5F46'><dir id='F4CD7F5F46'><tfoot id='F4CD7F5F46'></tfoot><noframes id='F4CD7F5F46'>

    • <optgroup id='F4CD7F5F46'><strike id='F4CD7F5F46'><sup id='F4CD7F5F46'></sup></strike><code id='F4CD7F5F46'></code></optgroup>
        1. <b id='F4CD7F5F46'><label id='F4CD7F5F46'><select id='F4CD7F5F46'><dt id='F4CD7F5F46'><span id='F4CD7F5F46'></span></dt></select></label></b><u id='F4CD7F5F46'></u>
          <i id='F4CD7F5F46'><strike id='F4CD7F5F46'><tt id='F4CD7F5F46'><pre id='F4CD7F5F46'></pre></tt></strike></i>

          entertainment

          entertainment

          author:fashion    Page View:4
          Tome cofounders Jonathan Gootenberg, left, and Omar Abudayyeh, a scientific team that's trying to reinvent gene editing for a new era of biotech innovation.
          Suzanne Kreiter/Globe staff

          WATERTOWN — Their brainstorming began in an MIT class in 2010 when the eager undergrads shot each other emails about how to solve a bioengineering equation. It has continued for 14 years over sushi dinners, between Marvel movies, and during rowing-machine workouts.

          Together, Omar Abudayyeh, 33, and Jonathan Gootenberg, 32, have probed the mysteries of genomic editing and COVID detection. They co-published 10 scientific papers, helped launch two medical-diagnostic companies, and cofounded a Watertown startup, Tome Biosciences, that reengineers genes and cells to cure diseases. They also run the Abudayyeh-Gootenberg Lab at Harvard.

          advertisement

          Gootenberg and Abudayyeh are an unusual pair, two scientists — a Jewish American and a Palestinian American — who prefer working together in a field that often draws solitary researchers and rewards individual achievement.

          Get unlimited access to award-winning journalism and exclusive events.

          Subscribe Log In

          knowledge

          In age of alternative facts, a scholarly course on calling out crap
          In age of alternative facts, a scholarly course on calling out crap

          Screenshotviacallingbullshit.orgTiredofalternativefacts,fakenews,andbreathlesshyperbole,twoprofessor

          read more
          Study: Pain burden is higher in Black NFL players than white ones
          Study: Pain burden is higher in Black NFL players than white ones

          JuliusThomas,nowpursuinghisPh.D.inpsychology,playingfortheMiamiDolphinsin2017.AdrianKraus/APIt’stobe

          read more
          Supreme Court strikes down use of affirmative action
          Supreme Court strikes down use of affirmative action

          ActivistsdemonstratedastheSupremeCourtheardoralargumentsonapairofaffirmativeactioncasesinOctober2022

          read more

          Bronny James, LeBron's son, suffers cardiac arrest during basketball practice at USC

          0:32SierraCanyon'sBronnyJameswarmsupathalftimeduringahighschoolbasketballgameagainstChristopherColum