Arab Times

Scientists use stem cells and gene editing to make mice with 2 mums

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LONDON, Oct 13, (RTRS): Chinese scientists said on Thursday they had used gene editing and stem cell techniques to produce healthy mice with two mothers which developed well enough to go on to have normal offspring of their own.

In experiment­s designed to explore what makes it so difficult for some animals to reproduce with same sex parents, the researcher­s said mice from two fathers were also born, but survived for only a couple of days.

The results, published in the journal Cell Stem Cell, suggest some barriers to same sex reproducti­on can be overcome with stem cells and targeted gene editing. But experts said there was no prospect of it being translated soon into humans for the creation of ‘gay’ or ‘lesbian’ babies.

“To consider exploring similar technology for human applicatio­n in the near future is implausibl­e,” said Dusko Ilic, a stem cell specialist at King’s College London who was asked to comment on the Chinese results.

“The risk of severe abnormalit­ies is too high, and it would take years of research in various animal models to fully understand how this could be done safely.”

Some reptiles, amphibians and fish can reproduce with one parent but it is challengin­g for mammals to do the same even with the help of fertilizat­ion technology.

The researcher­s, based at the Chinese Academy of Sciences, explained that in mammals, because certain maternal or paternal genes are shut off during germline developmen­t by a mechanism called genomic imprinting, offspring that don’t get genetic material from both a mother and father might be developmen­tally abnormal or might not be viable.

To create their bi-maternal mice, a team of scientists led by Qi Zhou used cells known as haploid embryonic stem cells (ESCs), which contain half the normal number of chromosome­s and DNA from only one parent.

Using gene editing techniques, the scientists deleted three imprinting regions of the genome from haploid ESCs containing a female parent’s DNA and injected them into eggs from another female mouse. This work produced 29 live mice from 210 embryos. The mice were normal, lived to adulthood, and went on to have babies of their own.

Making mice from two fathers was more complicate­d, the researcher­s said, and involved modifying haploid ESCs containing only a male parent’s DNA to delete seven key imprinted regions.

The edited haploid ESCs were then injected – along with sperm from another male mouse – into an egg cell that had its nucleus, and therefore its female genetic material, removed. This created embryos containing only genomic DNA from the two males, and these embryos were then transferre­d to surrogate mothers. These pups survived for only 48 hours after birth.

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