Ashe Dryden

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In the 1980s, Tom Cech, my postdoctoral adviser at the University of Colorado, Boulder, had been awarded the Nobel Prize for his discovery of self-splicing ribozymes. His discovery was a breakthrough because the existence of self-splicing ribozymes suggested that life on earth arose from molecules of RNA that could both encode genetic information and replicate that information in primitive cells.
A Crack In Creation: A Nobel Prize Winner's Insight into the Future of Genetic Engineering
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