Technology Quarterly | Reproductive science

Designing babies

Will tinkering with human embryos ever be worth the risk?

Collage of baby with a circle overlayed
Illustration: Mark Weaver
|8 min read

One of the greatest scandals in modern science began with a late-2010s advertisement for HIV-positive couples looking to have children through in-vitro fertilisation (IVF). The ad had been put out by a scientist named He Jiankui, a biologist then at the Southern University of Science and Technology in China. Several pairs responded. For each couple, Dr He and his team harvested their sperm and eggs and created embryos through IVF. He edited a gene in each embryo using CRISPR, then did something that had never been done before: had the edited embryos implanted into the women’s wombs.

This article appeared in the Technology Quarterly section of the print edition under the headline “Designing babies”

From the March 1st 2025 edition

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