CRISPR tech selectively shreds cancer cells, including "undruggable" cancers

323 points - today at 3:15 PM

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bonsai_spool today at 4:32 PM
Here's their preprint from a month ago, in case you can't access the Nature paper: https://www.biorxiv.org/content/10.64898/2026.05.08.723607v1

Nature - https://www.nature.com/articles/s41586-026-10738-7

ordinaryradical today at 5:09 PM
CRISPR is an extremely overhyped approach which found a marketing engine via popular science. There is 1 FDA approved CRISPR therapy as compared to 7 for AAV and 7 for Lentivirus.

Counting all viral vector therapies that have been approved, we’re sitting at 19 approved therapies versus 1 for CRISPR.

I think CRISPR ideas in a lab are just an easy way into the mainstream press, but viral vector delivery is the real future. It just didn’t get the same news cycle, for whatever reason.

MontyCarloHall today at 6:26 PM
The idea of using CRISPR/Cas to detect tumor-specific mutations that aren't necessarily oncogenic and then kill the cell is not a new one [0, 1, 2]. However, previous studies used Cas9, which just damages the DNA at the target site; this uses Cas12a2, which is far more destructive because it shreds the chromatin in the cell once activated by detecting the target sequence.

As with any cancer treatment, it's likely the tumor will evolve resistance. My guess is that cells will find ways to reject the lipid nanoparticles used to deliver the CRISPR/Cas mRNA and associated guide sequence(s), either via modifications to the cell surface (preventing LNP uptake) or via changes to endosomal/lysosomal pathways (causing the mRNA payload to get degraded before it has a chance to be translated into protein).

[0] https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/28575452/

[1] https://www.nature.com/articles/s41598-018-30205-2

[2] https://www.nature.com/articles/s41467-020-18875-x

Ifkaluva today at 4:09 PM
I hope this finally works out. I remember almost exactly ten years ago I got excited about one of these proposed cancer cures, tried to talk about it at lunch with my coworkers, and they laughed at me for believing.
perlgeek today at 4:43 PM
The article is pretty light on details, but

> Much like other CRISPR therapies, delivery is a critical challenge, i.e., getting the large genome-cutting enzyme to all the targeted cells efficiently.

makes me think this is in vitro so far. So, years to decades away from being available for actual treatment in humans. Still good news.

yieldcrv today at 6:05 PM
Cool. How can I help
Almondsetat today at 5:08 PM
Can anyone point to some resources about how cancers might adapt to CRISPR treatments?
deleted today at 5:22 PM
zouhair today at 4:54 PM
This is why I hate patents. If CRISPR were put behind a paywall, none of this would have happened. Everything having to be about profit is getting tiring.
needSomeCoffee today at 5:22 PM
Jennifer Doudna again. What an amazing scientist. Wow.
sssilver today at 4:27 PM
What economic / political model would cause the society to prioritize this over adtech? It seems so unsettling that brilliant human minds are trying hard, every day, to figure out how to make it impossible to bypass watching ads on YouTube, instead of helping cure cancer.
sourcegrift today at 4:48 PM
Over on reddit people were debating whether cancer should be cured since it disproportionately affects rich people and it made me realise how far reddit has fallen. It's just a botnet now to manipulate elections.