Print

Print


Plan to make human cloning safe set out

18:00 31 October 03

NewScientist.com news service

Even if they do not want to clone babies, researchers must to learn how to produce duplicate human cells safely. That
is the conclusion of experts who have outlined an ambitious program to identify and solve the problems that currently
plague cloning.

Only a few renegade scientists claim they are ready to clone human beings, but many biologists are interested in using
cloning techniques to genetically-match cells to patients for use as rejection-free transplants, and for research.

But Ian Wilmut, of Scotland's Roslin Institute, says even these plans should be shelved until more is known about how
cloning works - and why it fails so often. "There are a lot of questions to ask about cloned cells before you can
justify putting them in a patient," he told New Scientist.

Wilmut and his colleagues argue that the only way to answer those questions is to thoroughly dissect the failures of
animal cloning, rather than continue to celebrate its successes.

"They are very fair and thorough," says Robert Lanza of the cloning company Advanced Cell Technology in Massachusetts.
"They lay out the way it is and where we need to go from here."


Early deaths


In all uses of cloning, a cell from a donor is fused with an egg from which the genetic material has been removed. To
create a live clone, the resulting embryo is implanted in a surrogate mother.

In therapeutic cloning, the embryo is destroyed to harvest embryonic stem cells (ESCs), special cells which can
transform into any type of tissue. If the donor was a patient, then the stem-cell-derived tissues should be compatible
with that patient's immune system.

Wilmut's team reported the birth of Dolly the sheep - the first clone of an adult mammal - five years ago. But despite
much progress since then, the vast majority of embryos cloned for reproductive purposes continue to die before birth.
Even the survivors can suffer from many life-threatening abnormalities.

Almost all scientists agree this makes cloning humans far too dangerous to contemplate, but many hope to develop the
therapeutic uses of cloning. A few groups already claim to have harvested ESCs from cloned human embryos, though those
results are not yet widely accepted.

But when cloned human ESCs become available, Wilmut says researchers need to realise they might also pose a risk to
patients. For instance, gene activity in many animal clones is abnormal. So tissues created from cloned ESCs may also
function abnormally, potentially triggering cancers or other diseases.

Thrown away

Little is currently known about what causes these problems with gene expression, because researchers have focused on
creating and studying the few healthy animals created. Most of the data on dead ones is literally thrown away.

Instead, Wilmut says cloners need to systematically study every aspect of the cloning process, its genetic and
physiological effects on embryo, placenta, fetus and live animal. In his plan, clones would be compared side by side to
natural embryos and test-tube fertilised embryos.

Lanza at ACT agrees that the results from such studies would be tremendously valuable. However, he also points out they
will be extremely expensive. "We have investors who want results yesterday and want products in the clinic," he says.
"They aren't going to fund a Manhattan project for cloning."

But Wilmut thinks the work would attract many academic labs because it could yield insights on basic issues in
developmental biology. His team has already submitted one proposal to a funding agency aimed at cracking some of the
mysteries of cloning.

"It was not successful," he says. "But we'll be seeking more funding, and I think we'll get it."

Journal reference: Nature Reviews Genetics (vol 4, p 855)

Human Cloning: Can It Be Made Safe?
http://tinyurl.com/ta2s

Philip Cohen

SOURCE: New Scientist
http://www.newscientist.com/news/news.jsp?id=ns99994334

* * *

----------------------------------------------------------------------
To sign-off Parkinsn send a message to: mailto:[log in to unmask]
In the body of the message put: signoff parkinsn