British scientists given go-ahead for human-animal embryo research

(wz) Scientists in Britain have been given the go-ahead to create human-animal hybrid embryos for research.
Britain’s fertility regulator the Human Fertilisation and Embryology Authority (HFEA) has approved applications from King’s College London and Newcastle University to carry out the research.
This will allow them to create “cytoplasmic” embryos, where human cells are merged with eggs from animals such as cattle or rabbits.
These human-animal hybrid embryos will be used for research purposes and the scientists say such research could lead to therapies for diseases such as Parkinson’s and Alzheimer’s.
The HFEA licence committee says the two applications satisfied all the requirements of the law and they have been offered one-year research licenses to carry out the research; the research licenses are both subject to a series of detailed conditions.
A lengthy investigation was carried out by the HFEA including a public consultation which revealed that the public was generally in favour of allowing animal-human embryos for research.
Researchers aim to produce hybrids that are 99.9 percent human and 0.1 percent animal and this will involve transferring nuclei containing DNA from human cells to animal eggs which have had almost all their genetic information removed.
The resulting embryos are therefore mostly human, with a small animal component; stem cells, which can grow into different kinds of tissue, are then formed.
Dr. Lyle Armstrong, from Newcastle University says the long term objective of the research is to understand reprogramming and find better ways to make human embryonic stem cells.
Dr. Armstrong says cow eggs appear to be as good as human eggs for this purpose once their own nuclear DNA is removed and replaced with DNA from a human cell and they are much more readily available.
Until now scientists have had to rely on human eggs left over from fertility treatment, which are in short supply and are often of poor quality. more…

From: »News-Medical.Net«

One Response to “British scientists given go-ahead for human-animal embryo research”

  1.   British scientists given go-ahead for human-animal embryo research by medTRIALS.info Says:

    [...] and Alzheimer’s. The HFEA licence committee says the two applications …Original post by Werner Zapf delivered by Medtrials and [...]

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