Cloning Ignites Call for Ban on 'Unethical Science'
NewsMax.com Wires
Friday, Feb. 13, 2004
SEATTLE In a clash of politics and science, the first
successful cloning of a human embryo, and the extraction of stem
cells from it, have ignited new calls for a ban on all forms of
human cloning in the United States.
The cloning announcement by South Korean scientists on Thursday
prompted members of Congress and church leaders to ask for
immediate legislation.
"Cloning human beings is wrong. It is unethical to tinker with
human life," said Rep. Joe Pitts, R-Pa. A ban must be passed, he
said, "before this unethical science comes to our shores."
The Bush administration favors such action and referred
reporters to a statement by the president calling for "a
comprehensive and effective ban."
"Human life is a creation, not a commodity, and should not be
used as research material for reckless experiments," Bush said
last month.
Sen. Edward Kennedy, D-Mass., who voted against a bill passed
last year by the House that called for a ban on human cloning, said
there needed to be legislation that would prevent cloning of babies,
but permit "lifesaving stem-cell research to proceed under strict
ethical guidelines."
These Eggs Not Wanted
Two South Korean scientist who announced the landmark
achievement here Thursday said they had already been the target of
street demonstrations and egg-throwing incidents in Seoul.
Woo Suk Hwang, lead author of the study, admitted at a news
conference that the technique developed in his lab "cannot be
separated from reproductive cloning" and called on every country
to prevent the use of the technology in that way.
He said the work was controlled and regulated by Korea Stem
Cell Research Center "to prevent the remote possibility of any
uncontrolled accidents such as human reproductive cloning."
Shin Yong Moon, a co-author of the study, said the work must
continue because of its great promise for treating of diseases such
as Parkinson's, Alzheimer's, spinal cord injury and diabetes. But
he said a new law passed in Korea would now require his group to get
a government license before proceeding with their research.
The medical use of stem cells derived from cloning will require
at least an additional decade of research, he said.
Hwang and Moon are researchers at the Seoul National
University.
Donald Kennedy, editor of the journal Science, which published
the study, said the work was not a recipe for cloning babies.
"It is a recipe [for human cloning] in the sense that 'catch a
turtle' is the recipe for turtle soup," said Kennedy at a news
conference. "There is much difficulty that would remain for
anybody who tried to use this technology as a first step toward
reproductive cloning."
Hwang, Moon and their team created the human embryo after
collecting 242 eggs from 16 unpaid, anonymous volunteers. They also
took from each woman cells from the ovaries. To attempt male embryo
cloning, they used cells taken from the earlobes of adult men.
The researchers extracted the nucleus from each of the eggs and
then inserted the nucleus from the other cells.
The eggs were then nurtured into blastocysts, an early stage of
embryo development, and the stem cells were extracted.
Hwang said the group had a 43 percent success rate in making
cloned embryos, but was successful only in making one colony of
stem cells. Only the embryos made using the nucleus and the
egg from the same woman successfully matured enough to make stem
cells, he said. Eggs that received nuclei from adult male cells or
from adult cells of women other than the egg donor failed to
produce stem cells.
Hwang, a veterinarian, developed the cloning technique on
animals and then teamed with Moon for the experiment on human embryos.
Embryonic stem cells are the source of all tissue. Researchers
believe they can be coaxed to grow into heart, brain or nerve cells
that could be used to renew ailing organs.
In the experiment, Hwang and his team said, the embryonic stem
cells in tests that followed the cells for 70 divisions formed
muscle, bone and other tissue.
Using cloned embryonic stem cells for therapy would avoid the
problem of tissue rejection. Cloned stem cells, in theory, would be
an exact genetic match to the cell donor and would not be attacked
by the immune system.
Regulations approved by President Bush permit federal funding of research on stem cells, but only on cell lines created from embryos
destroyed before Aug. 9, 2001. The approved cell lines were not
created by cloning, however.
Kennedy, the Science editor, said the U.S. restrictions
handicapped American researchers.
"There is no question that the degree of restriction has given
other nations some significant advantage," he said.
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