New way to prevent genetically engineered and unaltered organisms from producing offspring

A major obstacle to applying genetic engineering to benefit humans and the environment is the risk that organisms whose genes have been altered might produce offspring with their natural counterparts, releasing the novel genes into the wild. Now, researchers have developed a promising way to prevent such interbreeding. The approach, called ‘synthetic incompatibility,’ effectively makes engineered organisms a separate species unable to produce viable offspring with their wild or domesticated relatives.