Print

Print


Monday, November 19, 2007

Ian Wilmut is done with human cloning
The UK's Telegraph reports on how the creator of Dolly the sheep has given
up on human "therapeutic cloning" (attempting to create cloned human embryos
and remove their stem cells) because the process of creating pluripotent
stem cells by reprogramming adult cells (no eggs or embryos needed) is more
practical.
This approach, he says, represents, the future for stem cell research,
rather than the nuclear transfer method that his large team used more than a
decade ago at the Roslin Institute, near Edinburgh, to create Dolly....

Cloning is still too wasteful of precious human eggs, which are in great
demand for fertility treatments, to consider for creating embryonic stem
cells. "It is a nice success but a bit limited," commented Prof Wilmut.
"Given the low efficiency, you wonder just how long nuclear transfer will
have a useful life."

Nor is it clear, he said, why the Oregon team was successful, which will
hamper attempts to improve their methods. Instead, Prof Wilmut is backing
direct reprogramming or "de-differentiation", the embryo free route pursued
by Prof Yamanaka, which he finds "100 times more interesting."

"The odds are that by the time we make nuclear transfer work in humans,
direct reprogramming will work too.

I am anticipating that before too long we will be able to use the Yamanaka
approach to achieve the same, without making human embryos. I have no doubt
that in the long term, direct reprogramming will be more productive, though
we can't be sure exactly when, next year or five years into the future."
Can you hear that? That's the death bell is ringing for human cloning for
research. How soon before other researchers start catching on and begin to
admit that therapies via human cloning aren't at all practical?

posted by Jivin J @ 6:15 AM

Rayilyn Brown
Board Member AZNPF
Arizona Chapter National Parkinson's Foundation
[log in to unmask]

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