A report by scientists Wednesday claiming that they have successfully
cloned monkey embryos and extracted stem cells from them has religious
bioethics groups concerned over impending human cloning.
A report by scientists Wednesday claiming that they have successfully
cloned monkey embryos and extracted stem cells from them has religious
bioethics groups concerned over impending human cloning.
Shoukhrat Mitalipov, who led a team of research scientists at Oregon
Health and Science University in Beaverton, said they used skin cells
from a 9-year-old adult male rhesus macaque monkey to create cloned
embryos, and then extracted stem cells from the embryo clones.
Mice are the only other group of animals from which cloned embryonic
stem cells have been created and now researchers are now saying the
technique should work in humans.
“We hope the technology will be useful for other labs that are working
on human eggs and human cells,” said Mitalipov in a New York Times
report. “I am quite sure it will work in humans.”
The group’s research was published online Wednesday in the scientific
journal Nature and will also be featured alongside a peer-review by an
Australian team in the Nov. 22 hardcopy issue.
The report has prompted religious bioethics groups to raise concerns
over the method’s application to therapeutic cloning in humans.
Many religious and pro-life groups oppose human cloning and the
destruction of human embryos to extract stem cells, viewing them as
unethical scientific practices.
Father Thomas Berg, executive director of the Westchester Institute for
Ethics and the Human Person, a Catholic ethics think tank, said the
pursuit of applying the cloning technique to humans “would be one of
humanity's darkest endeavors.”
He said in a statement Wednesday that while the breakthrough can help
to uncover ethical alternatives in stem cell research that do not
damage or destroy human embryos, there is extensive “basic biological
research that needs to be done before embryonic stem cells are ever
going to lead to cures.”
“That biology can be done perfectly well in monkeys,” argued Berg, who
has discussed the topics with Mitalipov. “The supposed urgency to press
on to human cloning is unfounded.”
“I certainly think that this represents a new threshold in the entire
discussion,” said the Rev. Tad Pacholczyk, director of education at the
National Catholic Bioethics Center, according to the New York Times.
“At this point, it becomes essential to ask a question as a society:
Are there ever going to be circumstances where it is morally
justifiable to clone human beings?”
The method in question which was used by Mitalipov’s team to create the
monkey embryos is called classic somatic cell nuclear transfer. During
the process, scientists take the nucleus from an adult cell to replace
the nucleus of the egg.
If that technique is successful with humans, scientists say, embryonic
stem cells could be used to grow tissue or even organ transplants that
are genetically compatible to the patient’s immune system, according to
Reuters.
In 2004, the scientific community thought cloned embryonic stem cells
had been created from humans. But the claims by South Korean researcher
Hwang Woo-Suk later turned out to be false.
Drawing lessons from the incident, the journal required the data from
Mitalipov’s research to be peer-reviewed before publishing it. The
team’s findings were first presented at a scientific meeting in
Australia in the summer.
Original
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Stem Cell Advance in Cloned Monkey Embryos Renews Human Cloning Debate
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