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In a message dated 15/01/2007 07:01:26 GMT Standard Time,  [log in to unmask]
writes:

'Dr  Frankenstein' can help you
Sir Paul Nurse

I can see the headlines  now: "Scientists grow human with rabbit ears". This
is a reference to the  human-animal eggs and embryos that researchers in
Britain propose to create  for research into stem cell therapy, opening up
the possibility of treating  a range of degenerative diseases such as
Parkinson's, Alzheimer's, motor  neurone disease and muscular atrophies that
affect millions worldwide and  for which existing treatments are of limited
effect.
With so much at  stake, we need to look beyond caricature to the science. The
government  recently proposed a ban on creating human-animal embryos. So it
is  important that there is a sophisticated dialogue between the  regulators,
the politicians, the scientists and the public. We need to  understand what
worries you and anticipate your questions. We have to  battle not only
against these terrible diseases but also against  misunderstanding and fear.

It is easy to create alarmist headlines.  That is why I welcome last week's
decision by the Human Fertilisation and  Embryology Authority (HFEA) not to
rule against this kind of work but to  hold a scientific and public
consultation. If we can explain what the  human-animal embryo really is and
how limited its life will be, as well as  the benefits to humanity from these
experiments, we will be giving people  the material they need to come to an
informed opinion about the ethics  involved.
We have a deep-seated cultural anxiety about hybrids, so ancient  that it is
echoed in our mythologies - as in the stories of the Minotaur or  the
centaurs that are depicted around the Parthenon. Such creatures  appear
unnatural and make us feel uncomfortable. We should remember that  there are
some naturally occurring hybrids, too: the horse and donkey  combine to make
a mule, for example. But when humans are involved we feel  more
uncomfortable.
Understanding more precisely what the human-animal  embryo actually is, and
how it can be used, will help us to accept this  work as a positive
development.
Embryonic stems cells are derived from  the early embryos of any mammal. They
have the potential to change into any  of the different cells in the body,
for example, brain, muscle or liver  cells. When introduced into damaged
human tissues and organs, they may be  able to reverse the effects of
degenerative diseases such as  Parkinson's.
The proposed work on human-animal eggs is crucial for  research. Human eggs
are rare and hard to work with, making progress slow  and difficult. By
contrast, eggs from animals such as rabbits or cows are  plentiful and of
good quality. The idea is to take a rabbit egg, for  example, remove all the
rabbit genes (its genome) and replace these with a  human nucleus or cell
containing the human genome. As the egg repeatedly  divides to form the mass
of cells that make up an early embryo, the  components of the rabbit egg are
replaced by human components.
The stem  cells derived from such embryos will be almost 100% human. These
will be  used solely for research; they will never be used in patients,  and
human-animal eggs will never be allowed to grow into a developed  hybrid
animal. But they will allow researchers to improve embryonic stem  cell
production and to study what goes wrong in the development of the  muscle or
nerve cells of patients with degenerative diseases.
Two groups  of scientists in Britain, initially, want to carry out these
procedures and  they have my full backing. Together with countries such as
Sweden, South  Korea, China and Israel, the UK is at the forefront of gene
therapy and the  HFEA is a highly respected body that has built a reputation
for allowing  first-class research. As the former head of Cancer Research UK,
I know from  experience that our ability to attract the best scientists in
the world to  our centres of excellence will be in jeopardy if we cannot
carry out such  experiments. So there is a huge responsibility for us in
Britain to get  this ruling right. The world respects the way we regulate
science in the UK  and looks to us to take the lead.
Scientists can only do what governments  allow. Last week, for the second
time in seven months, Congress in the  United States, where I now work, voted
in favour of relaxing the rules  governing embryo research. It did so last
July but the legislation was  vetoed by President Bush; we are now waiting to
see whether he will change  his position in response to the new vote.
The present constraints in the  United States mean that at the Rockefeller
University in New York, of which  I am now the president, the scientists
cannot create new human embryonic  cell lines using federal money. We have to
use private support for this  research, and we need to employ highly
bureaucratic measures to keep the  work completely separate from research in
the university supported by  federal funds.
The Commons science and technology committee has concluded  that the proposed
procedures using human-animal eggs are ethically  acceptable. As well as the
public good, there are commercial ramifications  for Britain in developing
effective therapies for degenerative  diseases.
The benefits to be derived from allowing this work are numerous.  The
scientific community needs to speak out in support of it, offering as  much
information as it can. I ask you to understand the significance of  this
crucial work, so that we may all move in the direction of finding  better
treatments, or even cures, for some of the terrible diseases that  millions
endure.
Sir Paul Nurse is a scientist who won a Nobel prize for  research on  cell
division

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'"human-animal eggs will never be allowed to grow into a developed  hybrid
animal."   - this is underestimating human curiostity - as  soon as there's
the tiniest chance of getting away with it, some fool will try  it, why else is
the Frankenstein theme so popular ?
I reckon the benefits are worth the trouble,  though.

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