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Cloned embryos offer possible Parkinson's cure
A team of Japanese and American scientists has used cloned embryos to produce the stem cells needed to cure symptoms of Parkinson's disease in mice. Using skin cells scraped from the tails of mice, the cells were cloned using mouse eggs, stem cells were then extracted and developed in the lab into healthy, dopamine-producing stem cells--a first--and injected into the mice, which subsequently showed marked improvement in various experiments.
Parkinson's is a disease in which the brain cells that create the neurotransmitter dopamine are killed off. The scientists believe that the animal study demonstrates that the same approach through therapeutic cloning--a procedure condemned by the Vatican--would work in humans.
"The authors were also able to test several independent embryonic stem cell lines corresponding to individual mice, and could show that most seemed to work well," said Professor Robin Lovell-Badge of the Medical Research Council. "This is very encouraging as it indicates that the cloning process is a sufficiently robust method of reprogramming cells back to an early embryonic state, at least when the early embryos are used to derive embryonic stem cell lines."
- read the article in the Independent
ALSO: A long list of U.K. charities are backing a bill that would approve human/animal hybrids for use in research. Report
Related Articles:
Gene therapy offers impressive results for Parkinson's. Report
Molecule could reverse Parkinson's. Report
Stem cell transplant a success against Parkinson's. Report
Comments
It is too bad that to save a life one must create...then destroy a living being. And maybe it would take several embroyos to create enough of the stem cells to save one individual...who will die in the long run anyway. Is it really progress?
Maybe addressing why the cells aren't producing dopamine to begin with and finding a way to stop that, perhaps through genetic manipulation. If scientists can create a baby out of a skin cell, why not mess with a disfunctional gene?
Who is to know if it is right or wrong...when you cross religion with science nothing seems to agree.
While many other processes and test may be in attempt, research and tests on embryonic stem cells could possibly be the future in cures for diseases in the next 10 years. The only problem is some humans are morally opposed to using embryonic stem cells and prefer Adult stem Cells which may not be as promicing.
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