India’s way to CRISPR cures

Uditi Saraf died before receiving treatment, but efforts launched for her could help spell a happy ending for other patients awaiting advanced life-saving therapies

Uditi Saraf with her mother. Credit: Rajeev and Sonam Saraf

Familial encephalopathy with neuroserpin inclusion bodies is a rare neurodegenerative disease with no cure due to the accumulation of toxic proteins in the brain. Depending on the specific mutation, the age of onset can vary greatly. In Uditi Saraf’s case, the first symptoms started early, at age 9. As she worsened, her parents decided to have her genome sequenced, identifying the genetic defect and diagnosing the condition. Their race against time to try to save their daughter was chronicled in an article in Nature, which also offers a glimpse into India’s efforts to make genomic treatments more accessible (see also Nature Biotechnology on gene and cell therapies in the Global South).

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