Print

Print


Nobel Laureates Back Stem Cell Research
Group of 80 Recipients Sends Letter Asking Bush Not to Block
U.S. Funding for Studies
By Rick Weiss
Washington Post Staff Writer
Thursday, February 22, 2001; Page A02

Hoping that sheer brainpower may help tip the balance in a heated
political and ethical debate, 80 U.S. Nobel laureates have signed a
letter to President Bush urging him to not block the first flow of
federal dollars for research on human embryo cells.

The letter, which organizers believe is the biggest collection of
Nobel signatures ever sent to a president, marks the latest effort
to influence the Bush administration as it decides whether to fund
experiments on embryonic stem cells. The cells, obtained from
spare human embryos slated for destruction at fertility clinics,
are widely believed to hold the potential to cure many ailments,
including juvenile diabetes and Parkinson's disease.

The decision about whether to fund the work is forcing the new
administration to weigh its political allegiances in an escalating
battle pitting antiabortion activists against patient advocates
and biomedical researchers.

Opponents of the work say the cells are ethically tainted because
human embryos must be destroyed to retrieve them.

But in their letter to Bush, the Nobel laureates say that given the
cells' great therapeutic promise, it would be immoral not to study
them.

"While we recognize the legitimate ethical issues raised by this
research, it is important to understand that the cells being used
in this research were destined to be discarded in any case,"
the letter said. "Under these circumstances, it would be tragic
to waste this opportunity to pursue the work that could
potentially alleviate human suffering."

The letter is to be faxed to the White House this  morning -- three
weeks before a National Institutes of Health deadline by which
scientists must apply for the agency's planned first round of stem
cell research grants.

Health and Human Services Secretary Tommy G. Thompson has
said he is "reviewing" the Clinton administration's decision to
fund such research, and Thompson "is cognizant of" the
March 15 deadline, said HHS spokesman Campbell Gardett.

But with Thompson's review still in its early stages, and the
NIH grantmaking process set to proceed, many researchers
fear that Bush will not wait and instead sign an executive order
blocking the funding before it begins.

The letter to Bush was signed by such notables as James
Watson, who won a Nobel in 1962 for co-discovering, with
Francis Crick, the structure of DNA; molecular biologist
Hamilton O. Smith, who was a key player in the recent
landmark genome mapping effort by Celera Genomics of
Rockville; Edward Lewis, the California Institute of
Technology biologist who conducted seminal work on
embryo development; and Nobelists in other disciplines,
including physicists Murray Gell-Mann and Steven Weinberg
and economists Robert Samuelson and Milton Friedman.

The letter was composed and circulated by Michael West and
Robert Lanza, two scientists at Advanced Cell Technology Inc.,
a biotechnology company in Worcester, Mass. Lanza said the
company, which conducts stem cell research, had nothing to gain
from the campaign since a Bush ban on federal funding for stem
cell research would force scientists to do business with private
companies such as his. Rather, he said, he was motivated by a
personal wish to help patients.

"As a medical doctor and a human being, I feel obligated to do
everything I can to ensure that this research reaches the clinic
as soon as possible."

The letter drew sharp criticism from opponents of the research,
including Douglas Johnson, legislative director for the National
Right to Life Committee.

"Just as war is too important to be left only to generals, the
killing of human beings in medical research is an issue too
important to be left only to scientists, even Nobel laureates,"
Johnson said. Like other opponents, he favors research on
similar cells obtained from adults -- an approach that many
scientists say is promising but not promising enough to
justify dropping the embryo studies.

The stem cell debate that Bush inherited started when the Clinton
administration determined that research on embryo cells was not
prohibited by a longstanding congressional ban on
embryo-destroying research. Federal researchers could not
themselves destroy embryos to get stem cells, the HHS general
counsel declared. But they could conduct research on cells taken
from embryos that privately funded researchers had destroyed.

Opponents claim that ruling was wrong and hope that Thompson's
new general counsel, yet to be named, will reverse the opinion.
That would stop the grant approval process on a legal technicality
without Bush having to make an executive decision.

The NIH delayed giving grant money for embryo cell research
until it developed new guidelines to ensure that the research
would not influence women's decisions to destroy or donate
their leftover embryos. Those guidelines were finalized last year.

An NIH spokesman yesterday declined to say how many stem cell
grant proposals the agency has received. Nor would he say how
close the agency is to naming the members of a new advisory
board that will review all such applications, or how long it might be
before the first grants are approved.

"To me, it's a no-brainer," said Stanford University biologist and
Nobelist Paul Berg, who signed the letter to Bush. "The cells
exist and they're being destroyed and you have to decide whether
you are going to just let that happen without getting any of the
potential benefits."

Richard Doerflinger, of the National Conference of Catholic Bishops,
disagreed. "Nobody ever said these Nobel prizes are for ethics,"
Doerflinger said.

© 2001 The Washington Post Company

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A36617-2001Feb21.html

************