Print

Print


Washington Post ... Cloned Embryos Could Help Explain Basis for Diseases
Scientists Expect to Determine Causes, Develop Therapies by Watching Progress of Illness in Cells Implanted in Mice

By Rick Weiss
Washington Post Staff Writer
Monday, February 23, 2004; Page A08

When South Korean researchers announced two weeks ago they had made the world's first cloned human embryos, they
emphasized they had no intention of allowing those embryos to grow into cloned babies. Their goal -- like that of
others doing similar work -- is to develop new therapies for Parkinson's disease, diabetes and other ailments.

The idea is to make a cloned embryo from a patient's healthy cells and then retrieve from the embryo stem cells that
could be used to repair the patient's failing organ -- an approach known as therapeutic cloning. Because the cells
would come from an embryo genetically identical to the patient, the theory goes, they would not be rejected by the
patient's immune system.

This potential to regenerate ailing organs has been a powerful -- though so far unsuccessful -- selling point as
scientists and advocates have tried to persuade Congress and the Bush administration to loosen federal restrictions
that preclude the use of federal funds for work involving cloned embryos.

In moments of candor, however, many scientists concede that therapeutic cloning is far down the list of reasons they
want to clone human embryos. In the long run, the promise is real, they insist. But the technical and regulatory
hurdles are so high that it could be a decade before the first proposal is ready for consideration by the Food and Drug
Administration.

The agency has already said it will want answers to tough questions before it will consider allowing cloned embryo
cells to be injected into patients: Will the cells go where they're supposed to go in the body? Could they turn into
the wrong kinds of cells once they're in the body? Will they start multiplying uncontrollably and form cancers?

By the time those and other questions get addressed in animal studies, an entirely new approach to regenerative
medicine -- one that may not depend on cloned embryos at all -- might have emerged.

But there are avenues of research that scientists do want to pursue immediately with cloned human embryos. They fall
under the category of basic research and so are unlikely to get patients and politicians excited, researchers
acknowledge. But they are experiments that could reveal in spectacular detail the basic causes of many diseases. And
they could speed the development of new drugs through already well-established pharmaceutical pipelines, without having
to break the new technical and regulatory ground that therapeutic cloning does.

Although the goals of these experiments are less sexy than the almost magical regrowing of sick organs, scientists are
starting to talk about them more -- in part out of frustration that Congress remains unconvinced embryo cloning
deserves federal support.

Instead of making cloned embryos as a source of healthy stem cells for transplantation into patients, scientists are
proposing to make cloned embryos that explicitly bear the genetic glitch or glitches at the root of a patient's
disease.

They would start with a diseased cell from a patient -- a degenerating nerve cell, for example, from a person with Lou
Gehrig's disease, a neurological disorder that robs people of control over their muscles. Using cloning techniques,
scientists would transform that cell into an embryo, which after a few days would produce stem cells. Each stem cell
would bear the genetic roots of the disease and each would have the potential, as stem cells do, to turn into any kind
of cell or tissue.

In the case of Lou Gehrig's, scientists already have found a handful of genes that appear to play a contributing role.
But as with many diseases, they don't know which are most important. They also don't know what environmental influences
might determine whether a person with those genes would get the disease or not.

With stem cells from a cloned Lou Gehrig's embryo, however, scientists believe they could quickly answer those
questions -- and a host of others.

Here's how it would work: Researchers already know how to force stem cells to become nerve cells, so in one set of
experiments they would do so with stem cells taken from a cloned Lou Gehrig's embryo and watch those cultured nerves as
they degenerate in a laboratory dish. That alone would be an unprecedented opportunity to watch the disease unfold
outside a person, and to test whether certain classes of chemicals or drugs might slow or prevent the process.

But even better, said Irving Weissman, director of Stanford's Institute for Cancer/Stem Cell Biology and Medicine,
scientists could inject those fresh but doomed neurons into the brains of mice and watch how the cells grow, die and
respond to various drugs.

"You could study them not only in a dish but in the context of the kind of organ in which they normally find
themselves," Weissman said.

Studies could go much further than that, others said. Scientists already know how to "fix" broken genes in stem cells
by splicing out the bad copies and replacing them with normal copies. Researchers could start doing that one at a time
with the handful of genes suspected of playing a role in Lou Gehrig's. Then they could see whether fixing one gene, or
another, or a combination of several, prevented the degeneration of nerves.

They could do the same with genes in muscle cells from a Lou Gehrig's embryo. After all, the disease is all about
communication between brain cells and muscle cells. And although scientists suspect that muscle cell genes may
contribute to the disease along with nerve cell genes, it is not known how big a role each plays.

With key genes identified, it would be much easier to design a drug or other therapy that could target the biochemical
essence of the disease.

Finally, since defective genes alone often are not enough to cause a disease but do so only after a specific
environmental trigger -- exposure to pollutants, stress hormones or cigarette smoke, for example -- scientists could
add those influences in lab dishes or in mice and see how they contribute.

"You could study the multistep progression of the disease," said Robert Lanza of Advanced Cell Technology in Worcester,
Mass., a company pursuing human embryo cloning with private money. "This use of clones has been totally missed by the
public but is of extreme importance to really understand the molecular basis of disease."

SOURCE: The Washington Post
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A62845-2004Feb22.html

* * *

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