Lead Into Gold: More on Yamanaka Continued Progress
"The scientists" have spent hundreds of millions and years trying to obtain tailor made, patient specific, pluripotent stem cells. Well, Shinya Yamanaka did it. From the story:
Skin cells from the face of 36 year old woman have been converted into her own embryonic like cells directly, in experiments that bring closer the day that doctors will not need to clone embryos to create any of a patient's own cells and tissues for novel treatments...Work yet to do, to be sure, but very good news indeed.
By inserting four key genes into adult cells, the scientists created a form of stem cell that can grow into virtually any kind of tissue--a feat that previously required destroying embryos to extract cells. The discovery may clear a path for researchers to produce stem cells more easily and without embryo destruction, which is bitterly opposed by pro life groups. But one of the genes the Japanese team used in the new method is also an oncogene, meaning it has been linked with certain types of cancer. And although a rival American group in Wisconsin avoided using that gene, they used cells from a newborn rather than an adult.Now the Japanese team led by Prof Shinya Yamanaka and colleagues at Kyoto University show in the journal Nature Biotechnology how to convert adult human skin cells into cells that resemble embryonic stem cells without using the tumour-causing gene c-Myc...
Scientists still need to devise ways to transform adult into embryo cells without the need for viruses, which are currently used to introduce the genes to reprogramme the cells and can in theory disrupt other genes.


1 Comments:
Hey Wesley, guess what? It looks like the CuresWithoutCloning people addressed my concerns about their proposed amendment to change the definition of cloning in Missouri. Originally, it was going to change the law to prohibit creating embryos that were "virtually identical to an existing or previously existing person" through SCNT, which I objected to as opening a huge loophole for genetically engineered embryos that were not virtually identical to anyone. Well, they seem to have thought about it, and now the new language prohibits creating embryos "by any means other than
fertilization of a human egg by a human sperm."
That's interesting, no? But I still have a concern, especially in light of this new pluripotent adult stem cell breakthrough, that it doesn't say "sperm of a human male" and "egg of a human female" like the current law says. The new language seems to be the same as the PCBE's language, which takes pains not to prohibit same-sex conception by deriving sperm from a female's adult stem cells or eggs from a male's. The PCBE thinks we should prohibit using gametes derived from embryonic stem cells, but not adut stem cells. So I'm not sure it is good news or not.
"Human sperm" doesn't rule out genetic engineered sperm or reprogrammed sperm, whereas "of a human male" does. But I think it's good that they listened to me.
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