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Key to future stem cell production may lie inside the testicles 
 
 ˇ Tissue is rich in formative cells, British scientists say
 ˇ New source would avoid need to destroy embryos 
 
  Ian Sample, science correspondent
Tuesday June 6, 2006
The Guardian 
 
  
British scientists have been granted permission to investigate whether stem 
cells found deep inside testicles can be used to repair damaged tissues and 
organs.
Researchers led by fertility specialist Robert Winston at the Hammersmith 
hospital in London will pluck cells from testicular tissue to see if they are 
as versatile as embryonic stem cells, which can potentially grow into any 
tissue in the body.
If the scientists succeed in harvesting the cells and keeping them alive, they 
could pave the way for powerful new therapies for conditions as diverse as 
heart disease, Parkinson's and spinal cord injuries, without the need to 
destroy human embryos to collect them. The work has been given the green 
light by the Human Fertilisation and Embryology Authority.
Article continues
 
 
 Embryos used in stem cell research are either donated from fertility clinics 
or created using therapeutic cloning, a practice some critics condemn as 
unethical and disrespectful to life because the embryo is destroyed in the 
procedure. In practical terms there is also a shortage of human eggs needed 
to make cloned embryos.
The scientists believe 0.3% of tissue in the testes is made up of stem cells, 
one of the highest counts in the body. "We've been tinkering with the testes 
for a year or two now, but what we don't know yet is how reliably we can get 
stem cells from them," said Lord Winston.
The HFEA licence allows the team to grow testicular cells alongside embryonic 
cells to see if they develop in the same way and show the same medical 
potential. The next step will be to nudge the cells into forming different 
tissue types, such as brain or heart cells. In future a man could bank 
testicular tissue early in life and use it years later to repair damaged or 
diseased organs, without the risk of rejection.
Cambridge University has estimated 150 different stem cell lines would be 
enough to grow tissue matching around 90% of the population, male and female.
Earlier this year, Gerd Hasenfuss, a researcher at the Georg-August-University 
in Göttingen, caught the attention of stem cell scientists around the world 
when he discovered that cells collected from mouse testicles could be grown 
into tissue types including heart, brain and skin cells.
Harry Moore, professor of reproductive biology at Sheffield University, 
welcomed the study. "In this country, the ethical issues of obtaining stem 
cells from cloned embryos are really covered by the HFEA, but there is still 
the major problem of where do you get eggs that are high enough quality and 
in sufficient quantity. The advantage of this work is that it avoids both of 
those issues," he said.
"It might not sound very appealing to men, but it isn't actually as traumatic 
as it sounds."
Professor Chris Barratt, scientific director of the Assisted Conception Unit 
at the Birmingham women's hospital, said: "There are a lot of testicles 
around and you don't need a staggering number to have enough variety to match 
nearly all of the population."

 
 

 Special report
Ethics of genetics

Full text
November 2003: HFEA report on sex selection
Human Fertilisation and Embryology Act 1990
The human reproductive cloning bill (pdf file)

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