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Study Reports Successful Cloning of Human Embryo Using Adult DNA
Posted : Thu, 17 Jan 2008 14:07:35 GMT
Author : AlphaMed Press

DURHAM, N.C., Jan. 17  /PRNewswire/ -- A California research team has become
the first to report, and painstakingly document, the cloning of a human
embryo using donated oocytes (egg cells) and DNA from the cells of an adult
donor.  The study was published online today by the journal "Stem Cells."
(Logo: http://www.newscom.com/cgi-bin/prnh/20080117/CLTH022LOGO )
The experiments, using a technique called somatic cell nuclear transfer
(SCNT), provide key steps toward the development of patient-specific
embryonic stem cells for use in developing new treatments for conditions
such as Alzheimer's disease, Parkinson's disease, and spinal cord injury,
among others.  The lead author was Andrew J. French, Ph.D., of Stemagen
Corp., a private company headquartered in La Jolla, Calif.
In the experiments, the researchers removed the nuclei of mature oocytes
from healthy young women who had previously donated eggs for successful
infertility treatments.  The SCNT technique was then used to insert DNA from
an adult male donor into the oocytes.  The DNA was derived from a type of
cell called fibroblasts, obtained from skin biopsies.
Subsequently, several of the reconstructed oocytes continued to develop as
normal embryos, to the blastocyst stage.  Extensive and carefully documented
genetic tests were performed to confirm the genetic identity of the cloned
embryos.  In three embryos, tests showed the same DNA as the male fibroblast
donor.
In one of the three cases, additional tests showed that the embryo had
another type of DNA, called mitochondrial DNA, from both the female oocyte
donor and the male DNA donor.
Mitochondrial DNA testing is viewed as an essential proof of successful
human cloning -- particularly after previous fabricated reports from a South
Korean research group.  Amidst this background of controversy, the
researchers took extraordinary steps to ensure that their experiments were
properly conducted and documented.  These included approval by an
independent review board and confirmation of the genetic results by an
independent laboratory, among other steps.
The ability to generate stem cells using the patient's own DNA holds great
promise for the treatment of currently incurable degenerative diseases, as
well as for cell-based drug discovery.  Previous studies reporting the
development of cloned human embryos have used embryonic stem cells as the
DNA donors.
"This study demonstrates, for the first time, that SCNT can be utilized to
generate cloned human blastocysts using differentiated adult donor nuclei
remodeled and reprogrammed by human oocytes," the researchers write.  They
believe that some key technical factors contributed to their successful
results, including the use of freshly donated oocytes from successful egg
donors.
While the study is an important step toward the development of stem cells
for therapeutic cloning, much more research will be needed to confirm and
extend the results.  Dr. French comments, "The data we present are not in
any way the final word on this topic, but, we anticipate, just one of many
publications from a variety of researchers who will use a variety of methods
to conduct and analyze similar experiments."
Dr. Miodrag Stojkovic, Co-Editor of "Stem Cells," comments:  "These
researchers have for the first time developed cloned embryos up to
blastocyst stage using adult somatic [skin] cells as donor cells.  This is a
key advance in the development of patient-specific stem cell lines for
therapeutic and drug development purposes. Although these results are
preliminary since no stem cell lines have been derived from the cloned
embryos, this may now be attempted."
The article, entitled "Development of Human Cloned Blastocysts Following
Somatic Cell Nuclear Transfer (SCNT) with Adult Fibroblasts," is available
online at: http://stemcells.alphamedpress.org/cgi/reprint/2007-0252v1.

Rayilyn Brown
Board Member AZNPF
Arizona Chapter National Parkinson's Foundation
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