Copyright
David H. SilverPublished On
2026-04-08Language
- English
Print Length
10 pagesTHEMA
- PH
- PHQ
- PHR
- PDZ
BISAC
- SCI055000
- SCI015000
- SCI057000
- SCI061000
- SCI075000
- SCI034000
Keywords
- Scientific storytelling
- Conceptual physics
- Modern physics explained
- Relativity and quantum mechanics
- Mathematics in science
- Deep science for general readers
The Three Genome Problem
Every human inherits two distinct genomes: nuclear DNA from both parents and mitochondrial DNA almost exclusively from the oocyte. This second genome — 37 genes controlling cellular energy production — mutates 10-100 times faster than nuclear DNA, causing devastating diseases when defective. Traditional IVF cannot prevent mothers from passing faulty mitochondria to children. Enter mitochondrial replacement therapy: scientists transfer nuclear DNA from an affected mother’s egg into a donor egg with healthy mitochondria. From single-base edits to chromosome transfers — many ethical questions arise to be discussed.
Contributors
David H. Silver
(author)David H. Silver is an industrial researcher whose career bridges computer vision, computational biology, and science communication. He studied mathematics, computer science, and biology at the Technion — Israel Institute of Technology as a Rothschild Scholar, and was awarded a Microsoft Research PhD Fellowship for his doctoral work in computational biology at Cambridge, UK. Silver’s peer-reviewed publications span multiple domains: computational biology in Nature and PNAS; computer vision systems in IEEE Transactions on Pattern Analysis and Machine Intelligence; medical AI in Human Reproduction and MIDL; and entertainment analysis in PLoS One. He holds over a dozen patents in depth sensing, medical imaging, and generative AI. His industry positions include Algorithm Engineer at Intel Corporation, ML Researcher at Apple, and CTO/co-founder roles at several technology startups. Silver maintains academic collaborations with researchers worldwide and serves as a peer reviewer for Image and Vision Computing and PNAS.