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Intelligence Agency Wants to Keep ‘Novel Organisms’ From Threatening Humans – June 2016

Intelligence Agency Wants to Keep ‘Novel Organisms’ From Threatening Humans – June 2016

Colleagues:

As you know, Randy Larsen will be our guest speaker for the NSF on “Bioterrorism” on July 7th.  Randy sent me this note this morning and an article which graphically portrays how the Bio Threat has morphed from one conducted by major states, such as the USSR, to something high school students can now produce.  Worth the read!

Ty

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Ty,
This is an issue we need to address on July 7th as a likely future threat. With the CRISPR-CAS 9 technology, high school biology students will soon have the capability to build designer bioweapons better than the top Soviet scientists were working on in the late 1980s.

Randy

Intelligence Agency Wants to Keep

‘Novel Organisms’ From Threatening Humans

By Mohana Ravindranath

Nextgov

June 14, 2016

The same technology that helps scientists sequence genes could also help them create “novel organisms” that could be used to attack humans and the environment, according to one intelligence agency.

The Intelligence Advanced Research Projects Activity, the intelligence community’s R&D arm, wants businesses to showcase technology that could prevent new biotechnology, such as DNA synthesis, from being exploited. At the end of this month, IARPA is hosting a Proposers’ Day in advance of a new solicitation for its Functional Genomic and Computational Assessment of Threats, or “Fun GCAT” program. 

New biological research on gene sequencing, synthesis and analysis “are likely to enable revolutionary advances in medicine, agriculture and materials,” IARPA’s posting says — but they also “have intensified security concerns around the accidental or deliberate misuse of biotechnologies.”

The potential that researchers could synthesize “novel organisms” from genetic material is a “special concern,” the posting said. Today, researchers aren’t screening DNA synthesis for the risks it might pose to humans and the environment, according to IARPA. To remedy this, the Fun GCAT program aims to assess “the threat potential of unknown genes.”

The ultimate goal is to create screening systems that can “prevent accidental or deliberate health hazards to humans and agricultural assets.”

Eventually, the program aims to use computational systems that can “predict structure and functions of unknown genes,” or create models of the risk that certain gene functions might present.

Nextgov has requested comment from IARPA.