The Herald (South Africa)

Scientists’ lab sheep can grow human organs

- Sarah Knapton

HUMAN-sheep hybrids have been created by scientists, opening the door for human organs to be grown inside the creatures for use in transplant­s or to cure diabetes.

A team at Stanford University successful­ly grew embryos, which had both sheep and human cells, inside a surrogate for three weeks.

It is the first stage towards growing an unlimited supply of human organs for transplant and even providing a cure for type 1 diabetes.

The next step is to implant human stem cells into sheep embryos which have been geneticall­y modified so they cannot grow a pancreas, in the hope that human DNA will fill in the missing code.

The team is to apply for permission to extend the experiment to 70 days to see if the human cells really can create an organ.

Dr Hiro Nakuachi, who is leading the research, believed that organs grown in animals for human transplant would be available within 10 years.

“We have already generated a mouse pancreas in rats and then transplant­ed those into a diabetic mouse and were able to show almost a complete cure without any immunosupp­ressants,” he said.

“When it comes to human-sheep it seems more difficult. So we would like to proceed a little longer and this time use organ-deficient embryos.

“It could take five years or it could take 10 years, but I think eventually we will be able to do this.”

But Robin Lovell-Badge, of the Francis Crick Institute in London, warned the resulting organs might still be rejected by the human body.

“Even if they succeed in replacing all pancreatic cell types in the sheep with human cells, the blood vessels within the pancreas will be sheep derived.

“The organs could not be used for transplant­s into humans without triggering the immune system to reject them – and this would probably be a very fast rejection.” – The Telegraph

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