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I just noticed this is  3 years old!!

Ray

Harvard researchers to clone human embryos
Wednesday, 7 June 2006
AFP

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BOSTON, Massachusetts, 7 June 2006 - Medical researchers connected with 
Harvard University said yesterday they had begun work on cloning human 
embryos to create stem cells, using private funds to avoid a federal 
financing ban.
The researchers from the Harvard Stem Cell Research Institute (HSCRI) said 
the project was aimed at creating disease-specific stem cell lines in an 
effort to develop treatments for a wide range of incurable conditions 
afflicting tens of millions of people.
Four years ago, U.S. President George W. Bush imposed a ban on federal 
financing of new embryonic stem cell lines and the HSCRI program will be run 
with private donations.

Research involving human embryonic stem cells is controversial because 
extracting the cells requires the destruction of a human embryo - albeit one 
in the earliest stage of development.

Harvard University President Lawrence Summers said the potential benefits of 
the program outweighed the concerns of those who felt it challenged the 
sanctity of human life.

"While we understand and respect the sincerely held beliefs of those who 
oppose this research, we are equally sincere in our belief that the 
life-and-death medical needs of countless suffering children and adults 
justifies moving forward with this research," Summers said in a statement.

Embryonic stem cells, considered the building blocks of life, can be grown 
into any of the 200 cell types encountered in the human body and thus be 
used to replace defective tissues.

The process to be pursued by the HSCRI researchers involves removing nuclei 
from egg cells, and replacing them with the nuclei of donor cells.

The resulting cell is subject to a chemical, or electrical, charge that 
triggers cell division and the creation of an embryo genetically identical 
to the donor of the nucleus.

"Our long-term goal is to create embryonic stem cells from a patient's 
tissues, correct the genetic defects, and get the repaired cells back into 
the patients," said George Daley, who will lead one research at Boston 
Children's hospital.

"In the meantime, however, using an embryonic cell rather than a skin cell 
will increase the chances that nuclear transfer will be successful.
"This will allow us to answer some basic questions of stem cell biology 
while becoming technically proficient in creating stem cell lines," Daley 
said.

The work in the Daley laboratory is utilising donor eggs and embryos from 
women undergoing in-vitro fertilisation (IVF) treatment.
During IVF treatment, a subset of retrieved eggs do not fertilise, and some 
embryos are not of sufficient quality to successfully produce a pregnancy.

Such eggs and embryos are typically disposed of as medical waste, but are 
capable of providing human embryonic stem cells.

Rayilyn Brown
Director AZNPF
Arizona Chapter National Parkinson Foundation
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