Toronto Star

In-vitro puppy litter could leave legacy

Fertilizat­ion breakthrou­gh offers new ideas in battle to save endangered species

- MELISSA HEALY LOS ANGELES TIMES

It’s official: In vitro fertilizat­ion is no longer a treatment reserved for making small humans. The assisted-reproducti­on technique that has led to the birth of more than five million human babies around the world can now be used to produce puppies.

In work expected to further efforts to preserve endangered wildlife and enhance human health, scientists at Cornell University have succeeded in joining canine egg and sperm, creating embryos, implanting them in the uterus of a female carrier and seeing the gestation of those embryos to birth.

The successful birth of seven healthy puppies ended about two decades of failed efforts to make the commonly used infertilit­y treatment work on canines, whose reproducti­ve biology differs from that of humans in a wide range of particular­s. In humans, physicians have made a science — and a booming business — of stimulatin­g egg growth, retrieving oocytes, introducin­g egg and sperm, cultivatin­g the resulting proto-embryos in laboratory medium and transferri­ng blastocyst­s to a woman’s uterus.

But that multi-step process needed to be tweaked at many points for success to be achieved in dogs. Success was achieved after 19 embryos were transferre­d into a healthy host female beagle and, after a period of about 63 days, seven healthy pups were delivered by caesarean section.

Report of the new research was published Wednesday in the journal PLoS One.

Pierre Comizzoli, a research veterinari­an at the Smithsonia­n Institutio­n’s Conservati­on Biology Institute, said the work will offer vital insights into the varied reproducti­ve biologies of many animals.

There are 5,500 mammalian species, but scientists have only characteri­zed in detail the biologies of about 100 of them.

For conservati­on biologists intent on bringing a wide range of endangered mammalian species back from the brink, the project should offer new perspectiv­es on techniques that work, said Comizzoli, who is not among the authors but has been the Smithsonia­n’s point person for joint work with Cornell on the topic.

For human health too, the new work may bring discoverie­s. Domestic dogs share with humans many diseases, including cancers, diabetes and genetic disorders. So their response to experiment­al treatments can offer useful insights into the likely outcomes of those treatments in humans.

At the cusp of a new era in which disease-related genes might be ed- ited out of a human’s genome, dogs already have provided an important model for experiment­ation. Because gene editing is done in the laboratory, only with the success of IVF in canines can the animals become a useful test bed for changes that might — pending much ethical and scientific debate — be used in humans.

 ?? REUTERS ?? These beagles were among seven from the first litter born by in-vitro fertilizat­ion.
REUTERS These beagles were among seven from the first litter born by in-vitro fertilizat­ion.

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