Windsor Star

Breakthrou­gh may stall reproducti­ve clock

Mouse cells turned into eggs

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NEW YORK Japanese scientists have turned mouse skin cells into eggs that produced baby mice — a technique that, if successful­ly applied to humans, could someday allow women to stop worrying about the ticking of their biological clocks and perhaps even help couples create “designer babies.”

For technical as well as ethical reasons, nobody expects doctors will be making eggs from women’s skin cells any time soon. But some see possibilit­ies and questions about its use.

Some experts say it could help millions of women who don’t have working eggs of their own, whether because of a medical condition or cancer treatment, or because they are too old.

“It could mean the reproducti­ve clock doesn’t tick for women anymore,” said Hank Greely, a Stanford University law professor who studies the implicatio­ns of biomedical technologi­es.

“I think it’s a pretty large advance in the next generation of reproducti­ve technologi­es for women,” said Amander Clark, who studies egg developmen­t at the University of California, Los Angeles. Discussion about policy and regulation “needs to begin now.”

The mice experiment­s were reported online Thursday in the journal Science by scientists at Kyoto University in Japan. The same group had previously reported work with male mouse cells that led to sperm.

In the new work, they began with geneticall­y reprogramm­ed skin cells from female fetal mice. The reprogramm­ing technique, discovered several years ago, makes an ordinary cell revert to a kind of blank slate, so it can be chemically prodded to develop into any kind of cell.

The Japanese researcher­s turned these cells into an early-stage version of eggs.

 ??  ?? KATSUHIKO HAYASHI/ The Associated Press An adult mouse, which was born from an egg cell produced from
a skin cell, and her pups, which were born normally.
KATSUHIKO HAYASHI/ The Associated Press An adult mouse, which was born from an egg cell produced from a skin cell, and her pups, which were born normally.

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