DOWN
Banned
Being called "the biggest biotech discovery of the century," a team of Chinese scientists made attempts to modify a gene in a non-viable embryo that would have caused a deadly blood disorder. They were able to introduce preferred viable DNA into a fraction of the embryos being tested and there were a number of "off-target" mutations, meaning there are major issues still with accuracy. This stopped them from continuing because they need to be closer to 100% accurate to make continued testing more possible, especially in a medical context.
Other scientists have called for a moratorium on the practice until it is further understood. While it may have the potential to eliminate numerous diseases someday, it also causes fears about "designer humans."
It's very likely that these studies will continue soon.
http://finance.yahoo.com/news/chinese-scientists-just-admitted-tweaking-205300657.html
New York Times article
http://www.nytimes.com/2015/04/24/h...s-of-human-embryos-raising-concerns.html?_r=0
Issue moratorium if old.
Other scientists have called for a moratorium on the practice until it is further understood. While it may have the potential to eliminate numerous diseases someday, it also causes fears about "designer humans."
It's very likely that these studies will continue soon.
http://finance.yahoo.com/news/chinese-scientists-just-admitted-tweaking-205300657.html
The genome-editing enzyme known as CAS9 at work on a strand of DNA.A group of Chinese scientists just reported that they modified the genome of human embryos, something that has never been done in the history of the world, according to a report in Nature News.
A recent biotech discovery — one that has been called the biggest biotech discovery of the century — showed how scientists might be able to modify a human genome when that genome was still just in an embryo.
This could change not only the genetic material of a person, but could also change the DNA they pass on, removing "bad" genetic codes (and potentially adding "good" ones) and taking an active hand in evolution.
Concerned scientists published an argument that no one should edit the human genome in this way until we better understood the consequences after a report uncovered rumors that Chinese scientists were already working on using this technology.
But this new paper, published April 18 in the journal Protein and Cell by a Chinese group led by gene-function researcher Junjiu Huang of Sun Yat-sen University, shows that work has already been done, and Nature News spoke to a Chinese source that said at least four different groups are "pursuing gene editing in human embryos."
Specifically, the team tried to modify a gene in a non-viable embryo that would have been responsible for a deadly blood disorder. But they noted in the study that they encountered serious challenges, suggesting there are still significant hurdles before clinical use becomes a reality.
Huang's group successfully introduced the DNA they wanted in only "a fraction" of the 28 embryos that had been "successfully spliced" (they tried 86 embryos at the start and tested 54 of the 71 that survived the procedure). They also found a "surprising number of ‘off-target’ mutations," according to Nature News.
Huang told Nature News that they stopped then because they knew that if they were do this work medically, that success rate would need to be closer to 100%.
New York Times article
http://www.nytimes.com/2015/04/24/h...s-of-human-embryos-raising-concerns.html?_r=0
The experiment with human embryos was dreaded, yet widely anticipated. Scientists somewhere, researchers said, were trying to edit genes with a technique that would permanently alter the DNA of every cell so that any changes would be passed on from generation to generation.
Those concerns drove leading researchers to issue urgent calls in major scientific journals last month to halt such work on human embryos, at least until it could be proved safe and until society decided if it was ethical.
Now, scientists in China report that they tried it.
The experiment failed, in precisely the ways that had been feared.
Jennifer A. Doudna, an inventor of a new genome-editing technique, in her office at the University of California, Berkeley. Dr. Doudna is the lead author of an article calling for a worldwide moratorium on the use of the new method, to give scientists, ethicists and the public time to fully understand the issues surrounding the breakthrough.
The Chinese researchers did not plan to produce a baby — they used defective human embryos — but did hope to end up with an embryo with a precisely altered gene in every cell but no other inadvertent DNA damage. None of the 85 human embryos they injected fulfilled those criteria. In almost every case, either the embryo died or the gene was not altered. Even the four embryos in which the targeted gene was edited had problems. Some of the embryo cells overrode the editing, resulting in embryos that were genetic mosaics. And speckled over their DNA was a sort of collateral damage – DNA mutations caused by the editing attempt.
Issue moratorium if old.