打开APP
userphoto
未登录

开通VIP,畅享免费电子书等14项超值服

开通VIP
Three

Britain’s fertility regulator has allowed doctors to create babies using the DNA from three people. Picture: Thinkstock

Ads by Kiosked

BRITAIN’S fertility regulator has approved controversial techniques allowing doctors to create babies using the DNA from three people.

Human Fertilisation and Embryology Authority chair Sally Cheshire described the decision as historic” and a “life-changing” moment for families who might benefit from the treatment.

“Parents at very high risk of having a child with a life-threatening mitochondrial disease may soon have the chance of a healthy, genetically related child,” she said in a statement on Thursday.

We have permitted the cautious use of mitochondrial donation in treatment, following advice from scientific experts https://t.co/2xKOcriIHO

— HFEA (@HFEA) December 15, 2016

The new procedures are intended to fix problems linked to mitochondria, the energy-producing structures outside a cell’s nucleus. Faulty mitochondria can result in conditions including muscular dystrophy, major organ failure and severe muscle weakness.

Last year, Britain changed its law to permit scientists to modify eggs or embryos before they are transferred into women, becoming the first country to legally approve the techniques.

In September, US-based doctors announced they had created the world’s first baby using such techniques, after travelling to Mexico to perform the methods, which have not been approved in the United States.

Meet the baby with three parents

To help women with mitochondria problems from passing them down to their children, scientists remove the nucleus DNA from the egg of a prospective mother and insert it into a donor egg from which the donor DNA has been removed. That can happen before or after fertilisation.

The resulting embryo ends up with nucleus DNA from its parents but mitochondrial DNA from a donor. The DNA from the donor amounts to less than one per cent of the resulting embryo’s genes.

But Britain’s decision to approve using the new methods will not open the floodgates to genetically modified babies. Clinics will need to apply to Britain’s fertility regulator for permission to use the techniques on a case-by-case basis.

The decision was made after five years of reviewing the development, safety and efficacy of the procedures.

This picture shows unwinding DNA, magnified three million times. Picture: Drew Berry, The Walter & Eliza Hall Medical InstituteSource:Supplied

Ads by Kiosked

Newcastle University said it was planning to apply for a licence to use the new fertility techniques and was aiming to treat up to 25 patients a year.

“It is enormously gratifying that our many years of research in this area can finally be applied to help families affected by these devastating diseases,” said Mary Herbert, a professor of reproductive biology at Newcastle University.

But critics charged the decision will put people at unnecessary risk of an untested procedure and said women with faulty mitochondria should opt simply to use egg donors.

“This decision opens the door to the world of (genetically modified) designer babies,” said David King, director of the Human Genetics Alert group. “Allowing mitochondrial replacement means that there is no logical basis for resisting GM babies.”

本站仅提供存储服务,所有内容均由用户发布,如发现有害或侵权内容,请点击举报
打开APP,阅读全文并永久保存 查看更多类似文章
猜你喜欢
类似文章
【热】打开小程序,算一算2024你的财运
为何生物的线粒体 DNA 只来自母亲| Science 论文推荐
《自然医学》双重磅:科学家首次利用基因编辑技术在动物体内修复线粒体DNA突变,线粒体遗传病终于迎来治...
父母成三人,世界首例线粒体移植人诞生 | 卫报
Nat Comm | 科学家揭示线粒体DNA分配新机制
MCE | 线粒体和能量代谢的关系
拥有三个父母的小孩
更多类似文章 >>
生活服务
热点新闻
分享 收藏 导长图 关注 下载文章
绑定账号成功
后续可登录账号畅享VIP特权!
如果VIP功能使用有故障,
可点击这里联系客服!

联系客服