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The Promise of Chimeras
September 14, 2006
The Congressional Biomedical Research Caucus briefed congressional staffers
yesterday on chimera research, which has the potential to revolutionize
medical research from organ transplants to disease study to drug testing.
However, the greatest danger to support for chimera research is a lack of
knowledge of both the research itself and its potential benefits.
Politicians should thoroughly examine this issue, utilizing scientific
advice and expertise, before regulating or prohibiting work in this field.
Chimeras are organisms with cells from two distinct fertilization events,
such as a man with a porcine heart valve or a mother who retains some of her
child's cells after birth.
Current stem cell advances benefit chimera research because they allow
scientists to create more sophisticated human/animal chimeras. This research
has so far allowed scientists to create sheep with human livers and mice
with human prostates.
Creating chimeras by placing human cells in animals has the potential to
vastly improve medicine. Researchers could perform drug tests on sheep with
human liver cells, rather than testing new medicines on humans, thus
avoiding human health risks. Scientists could also use chimeras to create
human organs for transplant or study the progression of cancer. The
potential of this research is astonishing.
However, chimeras do raise a number of ethical questions regarding the
extent to which human and animal cells may be combined.
The National Academies Guidelines for Embryonic Stem Cell Research already
provides reasonable regulation of chimera research to ensure it proceeds
ethically. Sen. Brownback has introduced legislation that is unnecessarily
strict in prohibiting some types of chimera research. The bill would
prohibit chimera research into brain tumors and could potentially hamper
other necessary studies as well. Legislators should take the time to develop
legislation that does not unnecessarily restrict research, while still
maintaining ethical practices. The National Academies' guidelines offer a
good start.

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