While little kids are simply daydreaming of having a pet unicorn, one startup is actually putting in the legwork to make it a reality.
The Los Angeles Project is using Crispr gene-editing technology to make our pets a little more interesting — we’re talking glow-in-the-dark bunnies, hypoallergenic cats, and, yes, literal unicorns — per Wired.
If glowing pets sound off the rails, it might help to put co-founder Josie Zayner’s resume in context: The biohacker livestreamed injecting herself with Crispr gene-editing tech and has given herself a DIY covid vaccine and a fecal transplant.
The startup, which Zayner told Wired is about making pets “more complex and interesting and beautiful and unique,” has begun work in stealth:
Once the rabbits get glowing, the team will start on cats that don’t have Fel d1, the protein that causes most cat allergies. Hallelujah.
… Humans have been selectively breeding animals for thousands of years.
GloFish — fish genetically modified with the GFP protein — are already sold in pet stores across the US.
While Zayner says the startup’s animals would be spayed and neutered to avoid accidental reproduction, playing God undoubtedly raises a whole lot of ethical questions. As does using Crispr tech for somewhat superficial, commercial purposes.
Our big question: Can our hypoallergenic kitten have a unicorn horn?