British Scientists Want Permission To Genetically Edit Viable Human Embryos. (Popsci).
While scientists around the world continue to
debate the use of the CRISPR/Cas9 system, the tool capable of precisely
editing DNA on the genomic level, British scientists working at the
Francis Crick Institute in London announced today
that they have applied for permission from the United Kingdom's
fertility regulator (the UK Human Fertilization & Embryology
Authority) to use this technique on viable human embryos. If granted,
this would allow them to directly study humans’ earliest stage of
development and would mark the first approval by a national regulatory
body to employ the CRISPR/Cas9 system on viable human embryos.
The use of the CRISPR/Cas9 system remains a
controversial issue. This new announcement comes only a few months after
an op-ed was published in Nature cautioning against its use, and after Chinese researchers reported
they had indeed successfully employed the CRISPR/Cas9 system on
non-viable human embryos to remove a part of the gene that causes a
genetic blood condition called beta thalassemia.
Kathy Niakan, a group leader at Crick and lead
author of the research, says her and her team plan to use CRISPR/Cas9
for basic research, with no intention of a clinical application.
Further, the viable embryos would only be studied for two weeks and, by
UK law, cannot be implanted for a successful pregnancy. However, the
information gathered by this basic research could have broad clinical
implications, particularly to improve the success rate for healthy
embryonic development after in vitro fertilization as well as potential
for use in stem cell research, according to the press release. Crick’s announcement was first reported in an article in The Guardian. Read the full story here.
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