gubbi
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But after diagnosis and detecting the unwanted genes it's possible to possible to replace those genes with the desired genes before transfered to the embryo to stop genetically transfered diseases, right? Look at the quoted portion in below where it is said that
those chromosomes can be detect during diagnosis and it's possible to eliminate those unwanted genes to avoid further genetic diseases.
Theoretically yes, and practically in the laboratory, yes. Heck, we routinely remove and replace/introduce genes in microbes in the lab. But doing that in a developing embryo is quite a complicated task, not to mention an ethical issue. Doing it in a full grown adult is much more complicated. We do not fully understand how the human body works at the molecular/cellular level.
Normally in Gene Therapy, we use viruses to help insert the correct gene into the Chromosomes in the cells. It is quite tricky, the virus has to be inactivated (kind of killed - they are not actually alive) - just like in some vaccines that you take in your infancy. The gene has to be inserted in the correct place in the huge DNA molecule (the human DNA from a single cell is 2nm thick and 3 mts long, coiled up in a very complex structure - called the chromatin/genomic DNA/chromosomes - inside the nucleus of the cell!). Wrong place insertions and anything can go wrong, like cancer etc. This whole process is not exactly a fine tuned one, more like a coarse adjustment.
There are a lot of problems with gene therapy. It is however at a very nascent stage, so cross your fingers! A reliable procedure should be available in a few years time, provided US does bump up the NIH budget by another few billions!