Andre Grillon

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The birth of Louise Brown in 1978, the world’s first “test-tube baby,” was a watershed moment for reproductive biology, proving that human procreation could be reduced to simple laboratory procedures: the mixing of purified eggs and sperm in a petri dish, the fostering of a zygote as it grew into a multicellular embryo, and the implantation of that embryo in the female womb.
A Crack In Creation: A Nobel Prize Winner's Insight into the Future of Genetic Engineering
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