Gene TherapyGenome editingRNA editingEpigenome control

Gene Therapy

As of June 2026, gene therapy is separating by permanence class. Ex vivo CRISPR is approved, systemic in vivo CRISPR has late-stage human data, RNA editing is moving toward regulatory feedback, and epigenome editing is testing whether durable regulation can be tuned rather than permanent.

Domain research lens

This page tracks delivery, edit durability, reversibility, off-target risk, tissue specificity, rescue logic, and whether the modality fits the disease mechanism.

June 2026 field state

A field moving from edit feasibility to permanence discipline.

The strongest programs ask whether the right tissue, dose, edit type, reversibility, and long-term follow-up burden match the disease.

Therapeutic platforms that edit, replace, silence, repair, regulate, or compensate for DNA, RNA, chromatin, and variant-to-function disease mechanisms.

The domain thesis: the strategic question is not DNA versus RNA versus epigenome. It is whether the required duration of effect matches the tolerable uncertainty.
What changed recently

In vivo editing has a late-stage signal.

Phase 3 HAE data make one-time systemic editing a current diligence problem rather than a distant platform promise.

What is now plausible

RNA editing can occupy a reversible permanence class.

Clinical AATD data are testing correction without permanent DNA alteration.

What remains unresolved

Safety scales with permanence.

Off-target, immune, liver, biodistribution, durability, retreatment, and reversibility questions become more consequential as edits become harder to reverse.

Recent research signals

The 2025-2026 update is a decision-gate wave.

Each signal below starts from the field: what changed, why it matters, and which research or buyer decision becomes more testable.

June 2026 / In vivo CRISPR

A systemic in vivo CRISPR program reported Phase 3 HAE data.

Intellia reported additional Phase 3 HAELO data for lonvoguran ziclumeran, a one-time KLKB1 gene-editing therapy for hereditary angioedema.

Why it matters

Late-stage human data make durability, safety monitoring, and chronic-therapy substitution immediate questions.

Decision implication

Changes whether in vivo editing is evaluated as a platform story or disease-specific permanence tradeoff.

April 2026 / Genome-editing safety

FDA safety expectations became more explicit.

FDA issued draft guidance on safety assessment of genome editing in human gene therapy products using next-generation sequencing.

Why it matters

Standardized off-target and safety expectations influence which platform claims can move toward IND and BLA packages.

Decision implication

Changes assay investment, IND-readiness, and long-term follow-up planning.

May 2026 / RNA editing

Clinical RNA editing is testing reversible genetic correction.

Wave reported RestorAATion-2 data for WVE-006 in alpha-1 antitrypsin deficiency and expected FDA feedback on a potential accelerated path in mid-2026.

Why it matters

RNA editing offers a repeatable and potentially reversible class, but it depends on dosing, tissue delivery, phenotype threshold, and durability.

Decision implication

Changes whether a buyer should prefer RNA correction over permanent DNA editing.

June 2026 / Prior knowledge

FDA opened a draft path for leveraging prior knowledge in genome-editing gene therapy.

FDA issued draft guidance on leveraging prior knowledge in human gene therapy products incorporating genome editing.

Why it matters

Rare and modular programs may be able to reduce redundant evidence if the mechanism, platform, and prior knowledge are credibly bridged.

Decision implication

Changes platform reuse, target expansion, and rare-disease development strategy.

Decision gates

What must be true before a buyer should build, fund, partner, monitor, avoid, or run the next study.

These are field-level gates first. The dossier library appears later as the set of existing Zemi products that can help investigate them.

Decision gate

Permanence fit

Does the disease justify permanent, transient, repeatable, or tunable intervention?

Decision gate

Delivery bottleneck

Can the modality reach the right tissue and cell type at a tolerable dose?

Decision gate

Off-target burden

Are assay sensitivity, biodistribution, and follow-up matched to risk?

Decision gate

Rescue evidence

Does the variant or mechanism respond in a decision-changing model?

Decision gate

Retreatment logic

Can the patient be retreated, reversed, rescued, or safely monitored?

Decision gate

Regulatory package

Is the trial design credible for small populations and long-duration uncertainty?

Zemi Dossiers in this domain

The dossiers sit where new research creates hard buyer decisions.

Each dossier card uses stats from the actual research report manifest and Evidence & Decision Workbook, including pages, workbook sheets, evidence/source rows, claim rows, power rows, and decision instruments where present.

Primary Zemi Dossier

In Vivo Gene Editing

Turns in-vivo editing from a modality story into a coupled-system failure-mode map.

Why it belongs here

Which in-vivo editing programs are limited by edit chemistry, delivery, immune response, durability, or CMC before pivotal spend?

Pairs the research report with workbook evidence rows, claim discipline, decision instruments, power calculations, and next-study surfaces.

101p report + 38-sheet workbook 72 evidence/source rows 63 claim rows; 70 excluded rows Coupling-Tax Decision Stack 17 hypothesis rows 14 power rows
Primary Zemi Dossier

RNA Editing & the Permanence Spectrum

Positions RNA editing on a permanence spectrum so buyers do not confuse reversibility with durability or safety by default.

Why it belongs here

Which RNA-editing programs should rent correction, extend correction, or avoid RNA-level strategy based on permanence needs?

Pairs the research report with workbook evidence rows, claim discipline, decision instruments, power calculations, and next-study surfaces.

112p report + 39-sheet workbook 40 evidence/source rows 56 claim rows; 133 excluded rows Permanence Spectrum Map 15 hypothesis rows 80 power rows
Primary Zemi Dossier

Epigenome Editing & Tunable Permanence

Classifies whether mitotic dilution, active erasure, or reactivation pressure will dominate before buyers commit to delivery, indication, or permanence strategy.

Why it belongs here

Which epigenome-editing programs have a defensible durability strategy, and what decay force would erase the imposed mark before benefit is proven?

Pairs the research report with workbook evidence rows, claim discipline, decision instruments, power calculations, and next-study surfaces.

96p report + 38-sheet workbook 68 evidence/source rows 70 claim rows; 83 excluded rows Durability-Limiting-Factor Classifier 16 hypothesis rows 34 power rows
Adjacent / cross-domain

Cell Therapy for Autoimmune Disease

Distinguishes remission achieved from durability solved by mapping persistence, sanctuary, and immune reconstitution risks.

Why it belongs here

Which autoimmune cell-therapy programs have a credible durability path, and what would reveal relapse risk before scale-up?

Pairs the research report with workbook evidence rows, claim discipline, decision instruments, power calculations, and next-study surfaces.

102p report + 41-sheet workbook 133 evidence/source rows 98 claim rows; 248 excluded rows Persistence-Sanctuary-Reconstitution Classifier 17 hypothesis rows 15 power rows
Adjacent / cross-domain

Immune Aging Supply Chain

Routes immune-aging programs to the binding supply-chain node before treating broad immune decline as one therapeutic target.

Why it belongs here

Which immune-aging interventions target the binding node, and when would restoration create more risk than resilience?

Pairs the research report with workbook evidence rows, claim discipline, decision instruments, power calculations, and next-study surfaces.

111p report + 45-sheet workbook 130 evidence/source rows 109 claim rows; 193 excluded rows Resilience-Limiting Node Classifier 15 hypothesis rows 14 power rows
Adjacent / cross-domain

Genetic Cardiomyopathy Precision Therapies

Uses molecular mechanism rather than gene label to route programs toward addition, knockdown, editing, or avoidance logic.

Why it belongs here

Which genetic cardiomyopathy programs match mechanism, modality, delivery, safety window, and evidentiary standard well enough to advance?

Pairs the research report with workbook evidence rows, claim discipline, decision instruments, power calculations, and next-study surfaces.

110p report + 39-sheet workbook 72 evidence/source rows 71 claim rows; 67 excluded rows Mechanism-Modality Match Matrix 18 hypothesis rows 34 power rows
Adjacent / cross-domain

AI Multi-Omics Variant-to-Rescue

Routes variant interpretation toward rescue experiments instead of stopping at association, prediction, or annotation confidence.

Why it belongs here

Which variant-to-function programs have enough evidence to justify rescue experiments, and what readout would falsify the rescue thesis?

Pairs the research report with workbook evidence rows, claim discipline, decision instruments, power calculations, and next-study surfaces.

121p report + 40-sheet workbook 85 evidence/source rows 91 claim rows; 130 excluded rows Variant-to-Rescue Decision Stack 18 hypothesis rows 32 power rows
Adjacent / cross-domain

AI Biology Drug Discovery

Separates static generation wins from the harder validation problem: whether AI can predict dynamic biological response under prospective tests.

Why it belongs here

Which AI-biology programs deserve validation spend now, and what experiment would show whether the model changes a real discovery decision?

Pairs the research report with workbook evidence rows, claim discipline, decision instruments, power calculations, and next-study surfaces.

119p report + 41-sheet workbook 195 evidence/source rows 74 claim rows; 144 excluded rows Dynamic Validation Gate Map 21 hypothesis rows 54 power rows
Adjacent / cross-domain

Partial Epigenetic Reprogramming

Maps the rejuvenation-transformation margin so buyers can distinguish clock movement from functional, controlled, and safe benefit.

Why it belongs here

Which partial-reprogramming programs have enough control, reversibility, and safety-margin evidence to justify next validation?

Pairs the research report with workbook evidence rows, claim discipline, decision instruments, power calculations, and next-study surfaces.

120p report + 38-sheet workbook 90 evidence/source rows 68 claim rows; 72 excluded rows Rejuvenation-Transformation Index 16 hypothesis rows 18 power rows
Adjacent / cross-domain

Ovarian Aging Multi-Clock

Separates endocrine, follicular, mitochondrial, stromal, and functional clocks before buyers infer benefit from measurement movement.

Why it belongs here

Which ovarian-aging readouts represent functional benefit, and which only move a clock without changing the decision?

Pairs the research report with workbook evidence rows, claim discipline, decision instruments, power calculations, and next-study surfaces.

102p report + 32-sheet workbook 71 evidence/source rows 73 claim rows; 48 excluded rows Multi-Clock Decision Map 20 hypothesis rows 34 power rows
Adjacent / cross-domain

Mitochondrial Medicine Permanence Ladder

Maps mitochondrial interventions onto a permanence ladder so buyers do not overbuild or underbuild the required correction.

Why it belongs here

Which mitochondrial programs need transient support, durable shift, editing, replacement, or avoidance based on heteroplasmy and tissue constraints?

Pairs the research report with workbook evidence rows, claim discipline, decision instruments, power calculations, and next-study surfaces.

100p report + 37-sheet workbook 86 evidence/source rows 71 claim rows; 27 excluded rows Permanence-Match Ladder 18 hypothesis rows 15 power rows

From domain signal to Zemi Dossier

Request access to inspect the full research report, Evidence & Decision Workbook, power calculations, and release-audit surfaces behind each decision package.