Uncategorized

What is gene therapy, and how is it used in medicine?

Gene therapy is a medical technique that involves changing or fixing genes inside a person’s cells to treat or prevent diseases. It works by adding, removing, or altering genetic material to correct faulty genes that cause illness.

Here’s how it works simply:

  1. Problem in genes:
    Some diseases happen because a gene is missing or not working properly. For example, genetic disorders like cystic fibrosis or muscular dystrophy occur due to defective genes.
  2. Goal of gene therapy:
    The aim is to fix the problem at its source — the gene — instead of just treating the symptoms.
  3. Methods used:
    • Replacing a faulty gene: A normal copy of the gene is added to take over the job of the damaged one.
    • Inactivating a harmful gene: A gene that causes disease is turned off.
    • Introducing a new gene: A completely new gene is added to help the body fight disease (for example, to make immune cells better at attacking cancer cells).
  4. How it’s delivered:
    Scientists usually use harmless viruses or other delivery systems (called vectors) to carry the healthy gene into the patient’s cells.
  5. Applications in medicine:
    • Treating inherited diseases like hemophilia and sickle cell anemia
    • Helping immune cells target cancer (CAR-T cell therapy)
    • Treating some types of blindness and immune system disorders

In simple words, gene therapy fixes diseases by repairing or replacing the broken instructions inside our cells, offering a way to treat illnesses that were once thought to be untreatable.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *