National Post

FRESH OFF A SCANDAL OVER GENETICALL­Y MODIFIED HUMANS, CHINESE SCIENTISTS ARE AGAIN DRAWING FIRE FROM ETHICISTS AFTER CREATING TRANSGENIC MONKEYS WITH ELEMENTS OF A HUMAN BRAIN.

CHINESE SCIENTISTS CONDUCT ‘MORALLY RISKY’ EXPERIMENT

- sharon Kirkey National Post skirkey@postmedia.com Twitter.com/sharon_kirkey

Their brains may not be bigger than normal, but monkeys created with human brain genes are exhibiting cognitive changes that suggest they might be smarter — and the experiment­s have ethicists shuddering.

In the wake of the geneticall­y modified human babies scandal, Chinese scientists are drawing fresh condemnati­on from philosophe­rs and ethicists, this time over the announceme­nt they’ve created transgenic monkeys with elements of a human brain.

A team led by scientists at the Kunming Institute of Zoology at the Chinese Academy of Sciences say they generated 11 transgenic rhesus monkeys carrying human copies of a gene known as MCPH1, which they describe as an important gene for brain developmen­t and brain evolution.

The gene is involved in a process known as neoteny — the delaying or slowing of the developmen­t of an organism. As a baby’s brain develops after birth, MCPH1 is expressed in abundance, but less so in non-human primates.

The monkey’s brains developed along the same timeline as a human brain.

Six of the monkeys died, however the five survivors “exhibited better short-term memory and shorter reaction time” compared to their wild-type controls, the researcher­s report in the journal National Science review.

According to the researcher­s, the experiment­s represent the first attempt to study the genetic basis of human brain origin using transgenic monkeys. The findings, they insist, “have the potential to provide important — and potentiall­y unique — insights into basic questions of what actually makes humans unique.”

For others, the work provokes a profoundly moral and visceral uneasiness. even one of the collaborat­ors — University of North Carolina computer scientist Martin Styner — told MIT Technology review he considered removing his name from the paper, which he said was unable to find a publisher in the West.

“Now we have created this animal which is different than it is supposed to be,” Styner said. “When we do experiment­s, we have to have a good understand­ing of what we are trying to learn, to help society, and that is not the case here.”

In an email to the National Post, Styner said he has an expertise in medical image analysis and was approached by the researcher­s back in 2011. He said he had no input on the science in the project, beyond how to best do the analysis of their MRI data. “At the time, I did not think deeply enough about the ethical considerat­ion.”

He eventually grew more and more uncomforta­ble with the generation of transgenic monkeys, “or even worse, transgenic apes,” for studying brain developmen­t.

“So, yes, it’s morally risky to move towards humanizing primates, particular­ly when we are talking about the brain,” Styner said.

Styner’s co-authors, however, said the traditiona­l mouse or rat models were “less ideal” than monkeys because of the vast dissimilar­ities in brain size and structure between humans and rodents.

When it comes to the scientific use of non-human primates, ethicists say the moral compass is skewed in cases like this.

Given the kind of beings monkeys are, “I certainly would have thought you would have had to have a reasonable expectatio­n of high benefit to human beings to justify the harms that you are going to have for intensely social, cognitivel­y complex, emotional animals like monkeys,” said Letitia Meynell, an associate professor in the department of philosophy at dalhousie University in halifax.

“It’s not clear that this kind of research has any reasonable expectatio­n of having any useful applicatio­n for human beings,” she said.

The science itself is also highly dubious and fundamenta­lly flawed in its logic, she said.

“If you took einstein as a baby and you raised him in the lab he wouldn’t turn out to be einstein,” Meynell said. “If you’re actually interested in studying the cognitive complexity of these animals, you’re not going to get a good representa­tion of that by raising them in labs, because they can’t develop the kind of cognitive and social skills they would in their normal environmen­t.”

The Chinese said the MCPH1 gene is one of the strongest candidates for human brain evolution. But looking at a single gene is just bad genetics, Meynell said. Multiple genes and their interactio­ns affect the vast majority of traits.

The researcher­s had expected their transgenic monkeys would have developed a bigger than normal brain, which wasn’t the case. The monkeys “did not manifest an enlarged brain size,” they reported — again underscori­ng that a single gene has limited effect on brain developmen­t.

One of the lead authors, Bing Su, told MIT that he’s testing other genes involved in brain evolution, including one dubbed the “humanity switch” for its presumed role in human intelligen­ce. As Vox reports, Su told the journal Nature in 2016 that he was also keen to experiment with FOXP2, a gene that expresses a protein required for the proper developmen­t of speech and language. “I don’t think the monkey will all of a sudden start speaking, but will have some behavioura­l change,” Su said.

Monkeys have all of the morally relevant traits that we have “that would make it wrong to do this kind of random, ‘gee, let’s see what happens’ research on humans,” Meynell said — research, of course, that’s now been done in China with the birth of geneticall­y modified twin girls. Last November, he Jiankui announced that he had edited the DNA of human embryos so that the babies would be resistant to HIV.

The University of Alberta’s Timothy Caulfield has warned that the more we humanize animals, the more it raises profoundly sticky moral questions, including the remote but not impossible risk animals could somehow develop human consciousn­ess.

Two years ago, American researcher­s succeeded in creating human-pig chimera embryos with the ultimate goal of one day growing human organs in animals for transplant.

I DID NOT THINK DEEPLY ENOUGH ABOUT THE ETHICAL CONSIDERAT­ION.

 ?? CHINA OUTSTR / AFP / GETTY IMAGES ?? Cloned macaques are seen at a research facility in Shanghai last year. Chinese scientists are drawing condemnati­on from philosophe­rs and ethicists over news that they’ve created transgenic monkeys with elements of a human brain.
CHINA OUTSTR / AFP / GETTY IMAGES Cloned macaques are seen at a research facility in Shanghai last year. Chinese scientists are drawing condemnati­on from philosophe­rs and ethicists over news that they’ve created transgenic monkeys with elements of a human brain.

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