genetic engineeringScienceScientists Just Created a ‘Woolly Mouse’ With Mammoth-Like FurBy Matt ReynoldsScienceMeet the Plant Hacker Creating Flowers Never Seen (or Smelled) BeforeBy Matt ReynoldsScienceWTF Is With the Pink Pineapples at the Grocery Store?!By Emily MullinScienceScientists Are Inching Closer to Bringing Back the Woolly MammothBy Matt ReynoldsScienceScientists Will Test a Cancer-Hunting mRNA TreatmentBy Emily MullinScienceIn a World First, a Patient's Antibody Cells Were Just Genetically EngineeredBy Emily MullinScienceThe First Crispr Medicine Is Now Approved in the USBy Emily MullinScienceA Single Infusion of a Gene-Editing Treatment Lowered High CholesterolBy Emily MullinScienceAnother Person Just Got a Pig Heart. Scientists Have a Plan to Make It LastBy Emily MullinScienceHere Come the Glow-in-the-Dark HouseplantsBy Emily MullinScienceHere’s What’s Next for Pig Organ TransplantsBy Emily MullinScienceA More Elegant Form of Gene Editing Progresses to Human TestingBy Emily MullinScienceTurns Out Fighting Mosquitoes With Mosquitoes Actually WorksBy Emily MullinScienceThis Gulp of Engineered Bacteria Is Meant to Treat DiseaseBy Emily MullinScienceHow to Detect a Man-Made BiothreatBy Emily MullinScienceA GMO Purple Tomato Is Coming to Stores. Will the US Bite?By Emily MullinScienceA Bold Idea to Stall the Climate Crisis—by Building Better TreesBy Matt ReynoldsThe Big StoryA Genetic Curse, a Scared Mom, and the Quest to ‘Fix’ EmbryosBy Stephen S. HallScienceWhy It’s a Big Deal If the First Covid Vaccine Is ‘Genetic’By Megan MolteniScienceCan a Genetically Modified Bug Combat a Global Farm Plague?By Eric NiilerScienceThe WIRED Guide to CrisprBy Megan Molteni and Grace HuckinsScienceThis Company Wants to Rewrite the Future of Genetic DiseaseBy Megan MolteniScienceA Netflix Series Explores the Brave New World of CrisprBy Megan MolteniScienceThe World Health Organization Says No More Gene-Edited BabiesBy Megan MolteniMore Stories