Irish Independent

Cloned monkeys a ‘stepping stone’ to copied humans

- John von Radowitz

SCIENTISTS have been accused of paving the way for living human clones after creating two geneticall­y identical monkeys.

Long-tailed macaques Zhong Zhong and Hua Hua were born eight and six weeks ago respective­ly at a laboratory in China.

They are the first primates to be cloned using the DNA-transfer technique that produced Dolly the sheep 20 years ago.

The aim of the scientists was to open the door to population­s of geneticall­y uniform monkeys that can be customised for ground-breaking research into human diseases.

But campaigner­s have hit out at the research, claiming it was a step towards the eventual cloning of humans and involved unacceptab­le cruelty to the animals.

Dr David King, director of the lobby group Human Genetics Alert, said: “We are concerned that this is a stepping stone to the creation of human clones.

“Although it looks like that would be technicall­y difficult, those with enough financial resources and the ambition to be the first to create a cloned child are likely to try.

“There would undoubtedl­y be a market for human clones.”

He called for an internatio­nal ban on the cloning and genetic engineerin­g of humans.

Dolly made history in 1997 after being cloned at the Roslin Institute in Edinburgh. It was the first time scientists had managed to clone a mammal from an adult cell, taken from the udder of a Finn Dorset sheep.

Since then many other mammals have been cloned using the same somatic cell nuclear transfer (SCNT) technique, which involves transferri­ng cell nucleus DNA to a donated egg cell that is then prompted to develop into an embryo.

They include sheep, cattle, pigs, dogs, cats, mice and rats – but until now, there has never been an SCNT-cloned monkey.

The Chinese team led by Dr Qiang Sun, director of the Non-Human Primate Research Facility at the Chinese Academy of Sciences Institute of Neuroscien­ce, Shanghai, made the breakthrou­gh by using DNA from foetal connective tissue cells.

After the DNA was transferre­d to donated eggs, genetic reprogramm­ing was used to switch on or off genes that would otherwise have suppressed embryo developmen­t.

Zhong Zhong and Hua Hua were the result of 79 nuclear transfer attempts. Two other monkeys were initially cloned from a different type of adult cell, but failed to survive.

Dr Katy Taylor, from the anti-vivisectio­n group Cruelty Free Internatio­nal, said: “The scientists themselves admit that their work has involved the abnormal developmen­t and death of many monkeys before and after birth.

“The scale of suffering and death of these highly intelligen­t and sensitive animals is substantia­l.”

The research is reported in the latest edition of the journal ‘Cell’.

Cloned monkeys would allow scientists to study “a lot of questions” about primate biology, Dr Sun stressed.

He added: “You can produce cloned monkeys with the same genetic background except the gene you manipulate­d. This will generate real models not just for geneticall­y based brain diseases, but also cancer, immune or metabolic disorders, and allow us to test the efficacy of the drugs for these conditions before clinical use.”

The scientists insisted they followed strict internatio­nal guidelines for animal research, set by the US National Institutes of Health.

British cloning expert Professor Robin Lovell-Badge, from the Francis Crick Institute, London, said he did not believe the research increased the chances of humans being cloned.

He said: “The work in this paper is not a stepping-stone to establishi­ng methods for obtaining live-born human clones.

“This clearly remains a very foolish thing to attempt. It would be far too inefficien­t, far too unsafe, and it is also pointless.”

 ??  ?? Cloned monkey Zhong Zhong at the Chinese Academy of Sciences in Shanghai
Cloned monkey Zhong Zhong at the Chinese Academy of Sciences in Shanghai

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