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Source: MSNBC news

Harvard seeks to clone human embryos
Researchers hope to produce controversial stem cells

The Associated Press
Updated: 3:31 p.m. ET Oct. 13, 2004


CAMBRIDGE, Mass. - Harvard University scientists have asked the
university’s ethical review board for permission to produce cloned human
embryos for disease research, potentially becoming the first researchers
in the nation to wade into a divisive area of study that has become a
presidential campaign issue.

“We want to find new ways to study and hopefully cure diseases,” said
Harvard biologist Douglas Melton, a senior researcher who, along with a
colleague, has applied for permission to do the work.

Embryonic stem cells are master cells that can form into any tissue of
the body. Many scientists believe harnessing them might one day allow
tissue regeneration to treat numerous diseases.

Harvesting stem cells from embryos kills the embryo, and some argue that
it is tantamount to taking a life. President Bush has signed an executive
order limiting federal help to all but existing stem cell lines.

Democratic challenger John Kerry supports widespread stem cell research.


The research group asking for a green light to advance its work is one of
two teams affiliated with the Harvard Stem Cell Institute, a facility set
up earlier this year to fund such research.

The university is considering all of the ethical and other issues of
embryonic stem cell cloning, said Provost Dr. Steven E. Hyman, although
he did not know when the university would reach a decision. “We are being
extremely careful about this,” he told The Boston Globe for a story in
Wednesday’s editions.

None of the proposed experiments involves attempts to produce a cloned
person.

So far, only a South Korean team has successfully performed nuclear
transfer with human cells. British scientists also have been granted
permission to conduct experiments.

URL: http://msnbc.msn.com/id/6237283/

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