Squids' Gene-Editing Superpowers May Unlock Human Cures | WIRED

Researchers found that the cephalopod is the only creature that can edit its RNA outside the nucleus. It's a tool that may one day help genetic medicine.
Gene-editing techniques like Crispr-based technologies aim to cure human disease by altering the genetic code of our DNA. For nearly every animal on Earth, any changes made to the DNA are transmitted from the cell nucleus by messenger RNA to the cytoplasm, the part of the cell that makes proteins.
But one animal species鈥攁 squid used as bait by fishermen, and as food by bigger sea creatures鈥攈as already figured out how to edit its genetic code in a way that may help scientists working on gene editing-based drugs and treatments. Scientists at the Marine Biological Laboratory in Woods Hole, Massachusetts, and their colleagues reported on Monday in the journal that longfin inshore squid (Doryteuthis pealeii) are the first known animals that can edit messenger RNA outside the cell nucleus.
MBLsenior scientist Joshua Rosenthal, an author on the new paper, says this unusual method of editing messenger RNA likely has something to do with the squid鈥檚 behavior in the ocean. 鈥淚t works by this massive tweaking of its nervous system,鈥 Rosenthal adds. 鈥淲hich is a really novel way of going through life.鈥
SOURCE: