News Scientists discover genetic cure for colour blindness

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Genetic scientists have discovered a cure for colour blindness, offering hope to millions of sufferers.

Scientists at the University of Washington, in Seattle, and the University of Florida restored normal vision to two colour-blind monkeys. The technique could prove to be a safe and effective cure for colour blindness and other visual disorders related to the cones in the retina.

“Although colour blindness is only moderately life-altering, we have shown we can cure a cone disease in a primate and that it can be done very safely,” said Professor William Hauswirth, an ophthalmic molecular geneticist at the University of Florida. “That is extremely encouraging for the development of therapies for human cone diseases that really are blinding.”

Those suffering from red-green colour blindness cannot distinguish between colours in the green-red-yellow part of the spectrum. This can make reading maps, using the internet and selecting a matching shirt and tie impossible. The disorder affects about 8 per cent of Caucasian males, but fewer than 0.5 per cent of females.

Normal colour vision requires three types of cone in the retina, sensitive to light in the blue, green, and red parts of the spectrum. The squirrel monkeys in the study — Dalton and Sam — lacked a gene called L opsin that codes for the red-sensitive cone. The same gene defect causes most cases of red-green colour blindness in humans. The scientists knew the monkeys were colour blind because they were trained to perform a touchscreen test. When they identified some patterns of coloured dots they were rewarded with grape juice but they could not distinguish between the grey, green and red dots.

In the study, published today in the journal Nature, scientists restored normal vision to the monkeys by injecting a virus modified to contain the L opsin gene into the retina. Over 24 weeks the light sensitivity of the cones infected with the virus shifted towards the red part of the spectrum. Then the monkeys easily distinguished the patterns of grey, green and red dots.

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Full Article: http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/science/medicine/article6837392.ece


This is great news for me, as I myself have a red-green deficiency, nothing major. It never caused any problems, and I can distinguish the street light colours. However, it has stopped me from perusing any sort of career in aviation, Pilot or ATC. Simply because I can not pass the colour tests. To hear that we have a cure for this is supper amazing news. There exists a cure, here and now. :D The only downside is that it has to pass trough all the aristocracy before it ever reaches the public. And that could be -decades- off.
 
There was already a post on this some time ago. :P
Also, any "cure" would change the way you perceive colors. Might be a bit difficult to adjust to and relearn.

EDIT: Hehe, I didn't even realize that I was the one who started the other thread! http://orbiter-forum.com/showthread.php?t=10274
 
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oh an and btw...YEAH UW! My alma mater!! :salute:
 
How long will it take before a cancer tumor genetic treatment is put into mass use? I think, it's in a range between 20 and 30 years from now.

I think much longer, such there is no such thing as "the cancer" and such genetic cures could also be causing new kinds of cancer.
 
I think much longer, such there is no such thing as "the cancer" and such genetic cures could also be causing new kinds of cancer.

Yes, a cancer is a genetic disorder and can be compared to a crime that takes many forms. However, I think there should be a way to define a "genetic order", which is to be maintained by a "virus police". Just dreaming...
 
And that could be -decades- off.

I'd rather wait that long before having myself injected with unsuficiently tested genetic viruses and turning into a prawn or grey goo within a few months... :lol:
 
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