Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

Britain OKs way to make babies from DNA of 3 people

- By Maria Cheng

LONDON — Britain’s fertility regulator has approved controvers­ial techniques allowing doctors to create babies using DNA from three people — what it called a “historic” decision to help prevent a small number of children from inheriting potentiall­y fatal diseases from their mothers.

The regulator’s chair, Sally Cheshire, on Thursday described it as a “lifechangi­ng” moment for families who might benefit from the treatment.

“Parents at very high risk of having a child with a life-threatenin­g mitochondr­ial disease may soon have the chance of a healthy, geneticall­y related child,” she said in a statement.

The new procedures are intended to fix problems linked to mitochondr­ia, the energy-producing structures outside a cell’s nucleus.

Faulty mitochondr­ia can result in conditions including muscular dystrophy, major organ failure and severe muscle weakness.

Last year, Britain changed its law to permit scientists to modify eggs or embryos before they are transferre­d into women, becoming the first country to legally approve the techniques.

In September, U.S.-based doctors announced they had created the world’s first baby using such techniques, after traveling to Mexico to perform the methods, which have not been approved in the United States.

To help women with mitochondr­ia problems from passing them down to their children, scientists remove the nucleus DNA from the egg of a prospectiv­e mother and insert it into a donor egg from which the donor DNA has been removed. That can happen before or after fertilizat­ion.

The resulting embryo ends up with nucleus DNA from its parents but mitochondr­ial DNA from a donor.

The DNA from the donor amounts to less than 1 percent of the resulting embryo’s genes.

But Britain’s decision to approve using the new methods will not open the floodgates to geneticall­y modified babies. Clinics will need to apply to Britain’s fertility regulator for permission to use the techniques on a case-by-case basis.

The decision was made after five years of reviewing the developmen­t, safety and efficacy of the procedures.

 ?? OHSU ?? Britain changed its law last year to permit scientists to modify eggs or embryos.
OHSU Britain changed its law last year to permit scientists to modify eggs or embryos.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States