Khaleej Times

Scientists turn skin cells into human sperm

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barcelona — Scientists in Spain on Wednesday announced that they had created human sperm from skin cells, a medical feat which could eventually lead to a treatment for infertilit­y.

The researcher­s said they were working to find a solution for the roughly 15 per cent of couples worldwide who are unable to have children and whose only option is to use donated sperm or eggs.

“What to do when someone who wants to have a child lacks gametes (eggs or sperm)?” asked Carlos Simon, the scientific director of the Valencian Infertilit­y Institute, Spain’s first medical institutio­n fully dedicated to assisted reproducti­on. “This is the problem we want to address: to be able to create gametes in people who do not have them.”

The result of their research, which was carried out with Stanford University in the US, was published in Scientific Reports, the online journal of Nature.

barcelona — Scientists in Spain on Wednesday said they had created human sperm from skin cells, a medical feat which could eventually lead to a treatment for infertilit­y.

The researcher­s said that they were working to find a solution for the roughly 15 per cent of couples worldwide who are unable to have children and whose only option is to use donated sperm or eggs.

“What to do when someone who wants to have a child lacks gametes (eggs or sperm)?” asked Carlos Simon, the scientific director of the Valencian Infertilit­y Institute, Spain’s first medical institutio­n fully dedicated to assisted reproducti­on.

“This is the problem we want to address: to be able to create gametes in people who do not have them.”

The result of their research, which was carried out with Stanford University in the United States, was published on Tuesday in Scientific Reports, the online journal of Nature.

They were inspired by the work of Japan’s Shinya Yamanaka and Britain’s John Gordon who in 2012 shared a Nobel prize for the discovery that adult cells can be transforme­d back into embryo like stem cells.

Simon and his team managed to reprogramm­e mature skin cells by introducin­g a cocktail of genes needed to create gametes.

Within a month the skin cell was transforme­d to become a germ cell, which can develop into sperm or an egg, but it did not have the ability to fertilise, they found.

“This is a sperm but it needs a further maturation phase to become a gamete.

This is just the beginning,” Simon said.

It is a step further than that reached by Chinese researcher­s who earlier this year announced they had created mice from artificial sperm. —

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