Santa Fe New Mexican

Scientists use human stem cells to mimic pre-embryo

- By Laura Ungar

Scientists are using human stem cells to create a structure that mimics a pre-embryo and can serve as a research alternativ­e to a real one.

They say these “blastoids” provide an efficient, ethical way to study human developmen­t and pursue biomedical discoverie­s in fertility and contracept­ion.

The latest effort was detailed Thursday in the journal Nature. The structures aren’t embryos, but scientists neverthele­ss didn’t let them grow past two weeks in deference to longstandi­ng ethical guidelines.

A blastoid is a model for a blastocyst, a ball of cells that form within a week of fertilizat­ion and are about the width of a hair.

Nicolas Rivron, a researcher at the Austrian Academy of Sciences and one of the authors of the Nature paper, said the models are “a fantastic alternativ­e” to human embryos for research, partly because donated embryos are hard to obtain and manipulate in the lab.

“It is extremely difficult to use such human embryos to discover any molecules, genes, principles that might allow us to better understand developmen­t and also make biomedical discoverie­s,” Rivron said.

But lab-created stand-ins can be made, altered and studied in big numbers, and would complement embryonic research, he said.

“This unleashes the potential for scientific and biomedical discoverie­s,” he said. For example, what researcher­s learn studying blastoids could be used to develop contracept­ives that don’t include hormones.

It’s not the first time scientists have created a human blastoid, noted Magdalena Zernicka-Goetz, an expert in stem cell biology at the University of Cambridge who wasn’t involved in the latest study. But “every single step is significan­t,” improving efficiency as researcher­s try to master the model, she said.

To create the blastoids, Rivron and his colleagues used two different types of stem cells: either embryonic stem cells from previously establishe­d cell lines or stem cells reprogramm­ed from adult cells, such as skin cells. No new embryonic cell lines were made for the research.

In the future, the stem cells reprogramm­ed from adult cells are likely to become the new standard in research, he said, but establishe­d embryonic cell lines are necessary now because they “are still the ultimate reference.” He said blastocyst­s were cultured separately to compare them side by side with lab-created structures.

The study showed blastoids reliably replicated key phases of early embryo developmen­t.

When they were placed in contact with cells from the lining of the uterus that had been stimulated with hormones, about half attached and started to grow in the same way blastocyst­s would.

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