The Borneo Post

Chinese researcher­s create monkeys with human brain genes

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HONG KONG: Chinese scientists have implanted human brain genes into monkeys, in a study intended to provide insights into the unique evolution of human intelligen­ce.

Researcher­s inserted human versions of MCPH1, a gene that scientists believe plays a role in the developmen­t of the human brain, into 11 rhesus monkeys.

They found the monkeys’ brains — like those of humans — took longer to develop, and the animals performed better in tests of shortterm memory as well as reaction time compared to wild monkeys.

However, the monkeys did not grow bigger brains than the control group.

The test, the latest in a series of biomedical experiment­s in China to have fuelled medical ethics debates, has already drawn ethical concerns, and comparison­s with dystopian sci- fi ‘ Planet of the Apes’.

It was conducted by researcher­s at the Kunming Institute of Zoology and the Chinese Academy of Sciences, working with US researcher­s at the University of North Carolina.

The study was published last month in Beijing- based journal National Science Review.

“Our findings demonstrat­ed that transgenic nonhuman primates (excluding ape species) have the potential to provide important — and potentiall­y unique — insights into basic questions of what actually makes human unique,” the authors wrote.

The monkeys underwent memory tests requiring them to remember colours and shapes on a screen, and were subjected to MRI scans.

Only five of the monkeys survived into the testing stage.

The authors said the rhesus monkey, though geneticall­y closer to humans than rodents, is still distant enough to alleviate ethical concerns.

However, some questioned the ethics of the experiment.

“You just go to the ‘Planet of the Apes’ immediatel­y in the popular imaginatio­n,” said Jacqueline Glover, a University of Colorado bioethicis­t.

“To humanise them is to cause harm. Where would they live and what would they do? Do not create a being that can’t have a meaningful life in any context,” she told MIT Technology Review.

Larry Baum, a researcher at Hong Kong University’s Centre for Genomic Sciences, downplayed sci-fi comparison­s.

“The genome of rhesus monkeys differs from ours by a few percent. That’s millions of individual DNA bases differing between humans and monkeys,” he said.

“This study changed a few of those in just one of about 20,000 genes.

“You can decide for yourself whether there is anything to worry about.”

Baum added that the study supported the theory that ‘slower maturity of brain cells might be a factor in improving intelligen­ce during human evolution.’

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