Singapore to create animals with human DNA
By DPA,
DPA
| 01. 09. 2008
Scientists eager to splice human genes with animal cells are seeking a public feedback on the prospect of such controversial research, the Bioethics Advisory Committee (BAC) said on Wednesday.
A consultation paper on its website said the BAC considers human stem cell research to have considerable potential in the treatment of currently incurable diseases, such as diabetes, Alzheimer's disease and Parkinson's disease.
"While there have been significant advances in stem cell science and technology, research involving human-animal combinations is required for further progress," the BAC said.
Professor Lim Pin, BAC chairperson, said scientists overwhelmingly want to conduct research in a way that is ethical.
Those favouring such research maintain it could be vital to finding cures to many human diseases. Mice with human brain cells could be used as test beds for Parkinson's disease or Alzheimer's disease drugs, they said.
The city-state, with its ambitions to become a global bio-medical powerhouse, has the technology to create these "mixed animals" that can be created by infusing a human nucleus, the cell's nerve centre, with an animal egg or cell, Lim said...
Related Articles
By Isaac Schultz, Gizmodo | 10.18.2024
Colossal Biosciences, a company mainly known for intending to genetically engineer proxies for several iconic extinct species, announced this week that it has made major steps towards the de-extinction of the thylacine, or Tasmanian tiger.
The thylacine was a carnivorous...
By Russ Burlingame, Comicbook | 07.23.2024
Colossal Laboratories and Biosciences, a biotech company that's putting together plans to orchestrate the de-extinction for animals like the dodo and the wooly mammoth, made some waves on Reddit recently when they petitioned the United Federation of Planets -- the...
By Shelly Fan, Singularity Hub | 05.31.2024
We all know the drill for reproduction—sperm meets egg.
For the past decade, scientists have been pushing the boundaries of where the two halves come from. Thanks to induced pluripotent stem cell technology, it’s now possible to scrape skin cells...
By Alison Snyder, Axios | 06.06.2024
Gene editing's next chapter will be focused on tackling cancers and more common diseases, uncovering new details about aging and other fundamental aspects of biology and editing RNA, top scientists in the field said this week.
The big picture: ...