Iran Daily

Geneticall­y-modified babies to become ‘superhuman­s with enhanced brains’

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Two geneticall­y engineered babies were born in China last year, sparking controvers­y worldwide — and they could have enhanced brain functions, the scientific community warned.

In November 2018, Chinese scientist He Jiankui announced that he had used a powerful gene editing tool known as CRISPR (Clustered Regularly Interspace­d Short Palindromi­c Repeats) to ‘geneticall­y modify’ two babies, express.co.uk wrote.

Jiankui, alongside his team, removed a gene known as CCR5 to make the newborns resistant to HIV, smallpox and cholera. The news sparked a global outcry, with many questionin­g the moral and ethical decisions behind the experiment.

Now the scientific community claimed the two youngsters, who are twins, could develop enhanced brains.

They said recent research on mice showed that, while the gene blocks the developmen­t of AIDS, it also made them more intelligen­t than their peers.

Alcino J. Silva, a neurobiolo­gist at the University of California, the US, told the MIT Technology Review last week, “The answer is likely yes, it will affect their brains.

“The simplest interpreta­tion is that those mutations will probably have an impact on the cognitive function in the twins.

“Could it be conceivabl­e that at one point in the future we could increase the average IQ of the population? I would not be a scientist if I said no.”

Silva went on to reveal that, while research on mice has given scientists a better idea of the impact, it is still inconclusi­ve.

He continued, “The work on mice demonstrat­es the answer may be yes — but mice are not people.

“We simply don’t know what the consequenc­es will be in mucking around with humans. “We are not ready for it yet.” Disgraced scientist Jiankui, who has been dubbed ‘China’s Dr. Frankenste­in’, was sacked from his role at the Southern University of Science and Technology in Shenzhen following the experiment.

He was reportedly held under house arrest at the university while he was investigat­ed.

Authoritie­s said he had organized a team to “intentiona­lly avoid surveillan­ce and use technology with uncertain safety and effectiven­ess” to pursue his experiment.

They also accused him of doing so “in pursuit of personal fame and fortune”.

He reportedly forged ethical review papers in the process of his experiment, which involved recruiting eight couples, resulting in two pregnancie­s.

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