Editorials in 2017

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  • This journal supports preprints as a means to rapidly share research, but discourages their use as stand-alone citations disclosing a new method integral to the key results in a paper.

    Editorial
  • Of the germline engineering approaches, mitochondrial replacement, rather than gene editing, is poised to have the greatest impact on our lives.

    Editorial
  • Although Kymriah's approval represents a landmark for chimeric antigen receptor T-cell (CAR-T) therapy in B-cell malignancies, solid tumors remain a formidable challenge.

    Editorial
  • Funders need to pay more attention to research aimed at increasing the shelf life of human organs. Doing so could pay dividends for both transplantation and basic research.

    Editorial
  • Retraction of a study claiming gene editing via an Argonaute enzyme illustrates the importance of post-publication peer review in the age of 24/7 media.

    Editorial
  • Digital medicine's extraordinary ability to communicate with patients, especially in under-served communities, could help reorient the biotech industry to better address aging and its associated diseases.

    Editorial
  • Bedside production of protein drugs could help payers by lowering drug prices. It may ultimately lead to individualized treatments.

    Editorial
  • The hegemony of the CRISPR system as a gene-editing therapy is not as assured as its use as a tool in basic research.

    Editorial
  • Should a cell therapy for heart disease with scant evidence of efficacy continue to be tested in humans?

    Editorial
  • RNA-based therapeutics are poised to become successful commercial products, but wide adoption across the biopharmaceutical industry will likely take a few more years.

    Editorial
  • Provisions in the 21st Century Cures Act related to leadership at the US National Institutes of Health (NIH) may spell trouble ahead.

    Editorial
  • Nature Biotechnology now requires data availability statements to be supplied with research papers.

    Editorial