Daily Mail

Clone cure for children

Copied cells ‘will repair disease damage’ ... but research sparks designer baby fears

- By Fiona MacRae Science Editor

A CURE for ‘ horrendous’ childhood illnesses is on the horizon, scientists said last night.

They made the prediction after using a cloning technique to create a repair kit for brains, muscles and hearts ravaged by mitochondr­ial disease.

This group of genetic illnesses can trigger miscarriag­es and stillbirth­s. Other children die in infancy or become progressiv­ely more ill as they enter adulthood and there is, as yet, no cure.

But the US breakthrou­gh also raises the spectre of babies being cloned to order in labs. The scientists stress their aim is to provide a treatment for seriously ill children. But there will be fears a rogue scientist will copy their work to try to clone humans. In the study, scientists from Oregon Health and Science University started by taking slivers of skin from adults and children with mitochondr­ial disease.

They then used two techniques to turn these into stem cells – master cells capable of transformi­ng into any of the cells in the body. The most successful of the two techniques was also the most controvers­ial. Using a process similar to that used to clone Dolly the sheep, they took the skin cells and put them in hollowed-out eggs.

They zapped the eggs with electricit­y to make them start developing into embryos. When the cloned embyros were five or six days old, and the size of a pinhead, they were mined for stem cells. These master cells were then turned into brain, muscle and heart cells.

Crucially, the cloning process eliminated the mitochondr­ial disease – meaning the resulting cells were healthy. A perfect match for the patient who donated the skin, they could potentiall­y be used to fix organs devastated by disease.

Researcher Shoukhrat Mitalipov said: ‘To families with a loved one born with mitochondr­ial disease waiting for a cure, today we can say that a cure is on the horizon.’

Professor Darren Griffin, of the University of Kent, said: ‘These diseases can be horrendous and any routes to therapy are most welcome.’ Professor Robin LovellBadg­e, a stem cell expert at the Francis Crick Institute in London, said using the cells to cure mitochondr­ial disease was ‘wishful thinking’. Others fear maverick scientists will exploit the technique to try to give grieving parents a replacemen­t for their dead child. Dr Peter Saunders, of the Christian Medical Fellowship, called the cloning cure ‘highly suspect ethically’.

And Dr David King, of campaign group Human Genetics Alert, said using the technique to treat mitochondr­ial disease could give full-on human cloning a new legitimacy. But Professor Lovell-Badge said it is so difficult and dangerous ‘no one in their right mind would do it.’

Mitochondr­ial disease hit the headlines earlier this year when Parliament approved an IVF technique that would allow couples blighted by it to have healthy children. This is controvers­ial as any babies that are created will effectivel­y have three parents – two mothers and a father.

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