The Japan Times - Lab-grown human 'embryos' offer new research hope

EUR -
AED 3.806008
AFN 78.239108
ALL 99.502096
AMD 411.744396
ANG 1.866877
AOA 947.11077
ARS 1089.291062
AUD 1.666254
AWG 1.867798
AZN 1.759212
BAM 1.952533
BBD 2.091471
BDT 126.314414
BGN 1.951633
BHD 0.390631
BIF 3066.170393
BMD 1.036226
BND 1.405701
BOB 7.157921
BRL 6.040782
BSD 1.035852
BTN 89.678807
BWP 14.427654
BYN 3.389814
BYR 20310.037946
BZD 2.080689
CAD 1.504103
CDF 2956.354193
CHF 0.943002
CLF 0.036946
CLP 1019.366955
CNY 7.447255
CNH 7.560417
COP 4329.09495
CRC 522.51828
CUC 1.036226
CUP 27.46
CVE 110.078187
CZK 25.184465
DJF 184.458736
DKK 7.461514
DOP 63.992942
DZD 140.129897
EGP 52.043125
ERN 15.543396
ETB 132.687597
FJD 2.405444
FKP 0.853423
GBP 0.836105
GEL 2.96384
GGP 0.853423
GHS 15.848257
GIP 0.853423
GMD 75.127404
GNF 8953.718287
GTQ 8.012595
GYD 216.714307
HKD 8.074572
HNL 26.387854
HRK 7.646883
HTG 135.493324
HUF 407.857669
IDR 16907.070363
ILS 3.703525
IMP 0.853423
INR 89.757413
IQD 1356.929899
IRR 43625.132136
ISK 146.698579
JEP 0.853423
JMD 163.361184
JOD 0.734892
JPY 160.23739
KES 133.883609
KGS 90.618144
KHR 4167.966789
KMF 489.979466
KPW 932.603898
KRW 1506.730209
KWD 0.319624
KYD 0.863243
KZT 536.743915
LAK 22535.971807
LBP 92759.473571
LKR 308.693565
LRD 206.132163
LSL 19.334953
LTL 3.059707
LVL 0.626803
LYD 5.085321
MAD 10.397705
MDL 19.339366
MGA 4816.871798
MKD 61.464499
MMK 3365.62301
MNT 3521.097506
MOP 8.314869
MRU 41.496578
MUR 48.339748
MVR 15.968092
MWK 1796.169065
MXN 21.444571
MYR 4.616413
MZN 66.225093
NAD 19.334953
NGN 1557.44845
NIO 38.116233
NOK 11.747569
NPR 143.485108
NZD 1.836737
OMR 0.398954
PAB 1.035852
PEN 3.853453
PGK 4.217801
PHP 60.491273
PKR 288.925736
PLN 4.213505
PYG 8170.331293
QAR 3.775883
RON 4.976687
RSD 117.12885
RUB 102.136691
RWF 1470.318919
SAR 3.886592
SBD 8.759936
SCR 15.558223
SDG 622.771963
SEK 11.491394
SGD 1.406216
SHP 0.853423
SLE 23.703691
SLL 21729.149953
SOS 592.001031
SRD 36.37103
STD 21447.794881
SVC 9.063531
SYP 13473.015973
SZL 19.322674
THB 34.810016
TJS 11.326887
TMT 3.637155
TND 3.308465
TOP 2.426943
TRY 37.157838
TTD 7.026144
TWD 34.089262
TZS 2642.377626
UAH 43.199087
UGX 3813.619934
USD 1.036226
UYU 44.825009
UZS 13440.514442
VES 59.985936
VND 25988.558759
VUV 123.022882
WST 2.902291
XAF 654.851974
XAG 0.032777
XAU 0.000368
XCD 2.800454
XDR 0.791849
XOF 654.839356
XPF 119.331742
YER 257.89083
ZAR 19.327933
ZMK 9327.280883
ZMW 28.978101
ZWL 333.664486
  • RBGPF

    2.7100

    64.91

    +4.18%

  • BCC

    -1.6400

    127.02

    -1.29%

  • RYCEF

    0.0400

    7.49

    +0.53%

  • SCS

    0.0350

    11.675

    +0.3%

  • CMSC

    0.0120

    23.692

    +0.05%

  • RELX

    -0.1200

    50.23

    -0.24%

  • NGG

    -0.0900

    61.65

    -0.15%

  • BCE

    0.0950

    23.995

    +0.4%

  • CMSD

    -0.0260

    24.194

    -0.11%

  • RIO

    0.1500

    61.06

    +0.25%

  • JRI

    0.0570

    12.627

    +0.45%

  • GSK

    0.0400

    35.4

    +0.11%

  • AZN

    -0.1150

    71.125

    -0.16%

  • BTI

    0.1000

    39.78

    +0.25%

  • BP

    -0.2300

    31.38

    -0.73%

  • VOD

    -0.0150

    8.595

    -0.17%

Lab-grown human 'embryos' offer new research hope
Lab-grown human 'embryos' offer new research hope / Photo: AHMAD GHARABLI - AFP

Lab-grown human 'embryos' offer new research hope

Scientists have developed human embryo-like structures without using sperm, an egg or fertilisation, offering hope for research on miscarriage and birth defects but also raising fresh ethical concerns.

Text size:

Earlier this year, several labs around the world released pre-print studies describing their development of early human embryo-like structures.

That work has not yet been peer-reviewed, but now one group's research has been published in the journal Nature, describing how they coaxed human embryonic stem cells to self-organise into a model resembling an early embryo.

The research was welcomed by some scientists as an "impressive" advance that could help unlock secrets about the precarious early stages of pregnancies, when failure is most common.

The work will however renew debate on the need for clearer ethical rules on development of lab-grown human embryo models.

The researchers, led by Palestinian scientist Jacob Hanna at the Weizmann Institute in Israel, harnesses the power of embryonic stem cells, which can become any kind of cell.

They produced embryo models up to 14 days old, which is the legal limit for such research in many countries, and the point at which organs like the brain begin to develop.

The researchers say their work differs from those of other teams because it uses chemically rather than genetically modified embryonic stem cells and produces models more like real human embryos, complete with yolk sac and amniotic cavity.

These similarities could make the models more useful for research into conditions like miscarriage, birth defects and infertility, said James Briscoe of Britain's Francis Crick Institute.

The model "seems to produce all of the different types of cells that form tissues at this early stage of development," said Briscoe, principal group leader and associate research director at the biomedical research charity.

The research "is a step towards opening a window on the period of human development where many pregnancies fail and which has been really difficult to study up until now."

Both the researchers and scientists not involved in the work emphasised that the models should not be considered human embryos.

The structure "highly resembles, but (is) not identical, to the in utero situation", the research notes.

The success rate on generating the models was also low, with the stem cells organising correctly just a small percentage of the time.

Still, the research and other recent work shows "that models of human embryos are getting more sophisticated and closer to events that occur during normal development," said Darius Widera, an expert in stem cell biology at the UK's University of Reading.

The work highlights "that a robust regulatory framework is more needed than ever before", he added.

In Britain, Cambridge University has begun developing the first governance framework for stem cell-based human embryo models.

The Weizmann Institute research does not involve transferring the models into a human or animal womb, or developing the structures beyond 14 days.

Y.Kato--JT