Aussies grant license
to clone human embryos
First-ever approval aimed at creating stem cells to treat
disease
MSNBC
Sept. 17, 2008
The in vitro-fertilization firm Sydney IVF was granted the
license and reportedly has access to 7,200 human eggs for its research.
If the firm is successful it would be a world first, the
Australian government's National Health and Medical Research Council, or NHMRC,
which granted the license, said on Wednesday.
Scientists in other countries have made stem cells they
believe are similar to embryonic cells using a variety of techniques, but none
have been able to extract embryonic stem cells from cloned human embryos.
An Australian ban on the research, known as therapeutic
cloning or somatic cell nuclear transfer, was lifted in December 2006 after a
rare conscience vote in the national parliament.
But the use of excess IVF embryos and the creation and use
of other embryos in research is restricted by law through national legislation.
Human cloning for reproductive purposes is banned.
Cloning limited to 'therapeutic' purposes
Chair of the NHMRC's licensing
committee, Dr John Findlay, said Sydney IVF's
research would be closely monitored.
"They have been given a license to do therapeutic
cloning,"
"They can go to the stage called blastocyst.
They must stop at that point," he said. The blastocyst
is a very early-stage embryo not yet implanted into the womb.
Initially, any stem cells extracted would be used to test
new drugs to fight diseases such as muscular dystrophy and Huntington's
disease, and later therapeutic cloning would be used to produce body tissue
matched to patients.
The director of Australians for Ethical Stem Cell Research,
David van Gend, criticized the issuing of the license, saying new technology meant cloning was no longer
necessary.
"We have regulations in
"We won't get cloning right through to the fetal stage
in order to use them for organ transplants, but if we teach the world how to
clone you can be quite sure it will be used in less rigorous
jurisdictions."
Somatic cell nuclear transfer is a technique in which DNA
from the nucleus of an unfertilized egg is removed and replaced with the
nucleus of an adult cell such as a skin cell.
Reproductive cloning is possible
The technique can be used to create cloned embryos in order
to derive embryonic stem cells for therapeutic purposes, but can also be used
for reproductive cloning.
There are several types of stem cells. Embryonic stem cells,
made from days-old embryos, are considered the most powerful because they can
give rise to all the cell types in the body.
Sydney IVF said only eggs that were unusable for IVF because
they were immature or had not been fertilized properly, and which donors had
given consent for, would be used in the research.
The firm said it will use three different types of cells,
embryonic stem cells, cumulus cells attached to the collected eggs, and skin
cells, to produce the cloned embryos.
Sydney IVF was the first, in 2004, to extract stem cells
from Australian IVF embryos, and has since extracted and grown 10 more colonies
of embryonic stem cells this way.
msnbc.msn.com