A very potent technology with the potential to change healthcare is gene editing. It entails changing the genetic makeup of living things by either adding new genetic material or directly modifying the DNA. Medicines and therapies for a number of illnesses, such as cancer, cystic fibrosis, and muscular dystrophy, have already been developed using this technique. Additionally, genetically edited animals and plants that are pest and disease resistant have been produced through gene editing. Gene editing has the ability to change any organism's genetic code, opening the door for its application in the treatment of a wide range of illnesses as well as the development of new goods and creatures. Although it is still in its infancy, this technology has the potential to change healthcare.
Title : Exploring the genetic diversity in tannin-rich forages to explain the large intra species variability in tannin content
Selina Sterup Moore, Aarhus University, Denmark
Title : Isolation and functional properties of biomolecules of plants and its application
Balagopalan Unni, GEMS Arts & Science College (Autonomous), India
Title : Primed for the future: PGPR and the promise of sustainable, heritable crop resilience
Prashant Singh, Banaras Hindu University (BHU), India
Title : Revealing allelic variations in candidate genes associated with grain yield under salinity stress between two contrasting rice genotypes
Nisha Sulari Kottearachchi, Wayamba University of Sri Lanka, Sri Lanka
Title : Adaptive strategies of Aristida L. species across ecological zones of Pakistan: Linking soil characteristics with morphological and physiological traits
Iram Ijaz, University of Agriculture Faisalabad Pakistan, Pakistan
Title : Ethnobotanical survey and abundance of weeds in selected Manihot esculenta (cassava) Crantz farms in Osun state, Nigeria
Dada Caleb Mayokun, University of Ibadan, Nigeria