U.S. company claims cloned humans and made stem cells
Thu Jan 17, 2008 11:19am EST

 
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By Maggie Fox, Health and Science Editor

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - A California company said on Thursday it used cloning 
technology to make five human embryos, with the eventual hope of making matched 
stem cells for patients.

Stemagen Corp. in La Jolla, California, destroyed the embryos while testing to 
make sure they were true clones. But the researchers, based at a fertility 
center, said they believed their ready source of new human eggs would make 
their venture a success.

Other experts were skeptical about the claims, published in the journal Stem 
Cells. If verified, the team would be the first to prove they have cloned human 
beings as a source of stem cells, the master cells of the body.

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.

The Stemagen team said they got five human embryos using skin cells from two 
adult men who work at the IVF center. They said they had painstakingly verified 
that the embryos were clones of the two men.

"We hope it is a bit of a turning point for many more studies," Andrew French, 
who led the research, said in a telephone interview.

They used a technique called somatic cell nuclear transfer, or SCNT, which 
involves hollowing out an egg cell and injecting the nucleus of a cell from the 
donor to be copied -- in this case, the skin cells from the men.

It is the same technique used to make Dolly the sheep in 1996, the first mammal 
to be cloned from an adult. Researchers hope to use the technique to create 
tailor-made transplants of cells, tissue or organs for patients, treating 
injuries and diseases like juvenile diabetes. 

"Since a significant percentage of couples undergoing fertility treatments 
appear willing to participate in this type of research, we believe the method 
described to obtain donated oocytes is a viable and ethically acceptable 
strategy," the researchers wrote.

MOST SUCCESSFUL SO FAR

Some cloning experts said the work appeared to be genuine.

"This is the most successful description so far of the use of the cloning 
techniques with purely human material. However, it is still a long way from 
achieving the goal of obtaining embryonic stem cells," said Robin Lovell-Badge 
of Britain's Medical Research Council's division of stem cell biology.

"I hope that the authors have the opportunity to continue their work and derive 
embryo stem cell lines," Ian Wilmut, who led the team that cloned Dolly and who 
is now at the University of Edinburgh, said in an e-mail.

The field is controversial for several reasons.

President George W. Bush opposes the use of human embryos to make stem cells 
and has vetoed bills from Congress that would expand federal funding of this 
research.

South Korean scientist Hwang Woo-suk made headlines when he was found to have 
faked key parts of a report that his team had used cloning technology to make 
human embryos in 2004.

"We need to be ultra-cautious after the Hwang scandal and not make the same 
mistake all over again," said Dr. Robert Lanza of Advanced Cell Technology, a 
Massachusetts company that is also trying to make human embryonic stem cells. 
"I'd really like to believe it, but I'm not sold yet," Lanza said.  Continued...

Other teams have made stem cells they believe are similar to embryonic cells 
using a variety of techniques, including reprogramming a human egg cell alone, 
reprogramming ordinary skin cells into what are called induced pluripotent stem 
cells, or by taking one cell from a human embryo without harming the embryo.

But most stem cell experts agree it is important to continue trying to make 
stem cells from embryos too.

(Editing by Will Dunham)



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