Title: Ethics of Human Cloning and Stem Cell Research
1Ethics of Human Cloning and Stem Cell Research
- Dr. Pattle Pun,
- Dept. of Biology, Wheaton College,
- Wheaton, IL 60187
- Pattle.p.pun_at_wheaton.edu
2From Clone to Man
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8Technology of cloning
9Technique similar to Intra-Cytoplasmic Sperm
Injection (ICSI)
10Mammalian (Non-human)Reproductive Cloning WHY?
- Accomplish animal husbandry goals
- Produce genetically identical animal strains
- Replicate elite farm livestock
- Animal conservation
- To produce transgenic livestock
- Pharming
- Xenotransplantation
- Disease-resistant livestock
11Mammalian (Non-human) Reprod. Cloning SUCCESSES
- Live births reported using adult donor nuclei in
at least eight mammals
- Goats
- Cats
- Rabbits
- Gaur (Asian ox)
12Mammalian (Non-human) Reprod. Cloning SUCCESSES
- Cleaving embryos (but not live births) reported
in several other species using donor nuclei from
fetal or adult cells - Dogs
- Rats
- Horses
- Monkeys
13Mammalian (Non-human) Reprod. Cloning SUCCESSES
- Several different transgenic mammals have been
generated using cloning technique - Sheep
- Mice
- Cows
- Pigs
- Goats
- Rabbitsnone have been liveborn yet
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20Polly and her sisters secrete human factor IX
in their milka drug needed by hemophiliacs
21Targeted disruption of a key gene causing tissue
rejection A step closer to xenotransplants?
22Developments in Human Cloning
- Abnormal human embryos cloned by embryo
splittingHall Stillman, 1993 - Establishment of human ES cell lines first
reported in 1998 from - BlastocystsThomson et al.
- Germinal tissues of fetusesShamblott, et al.
23Developments in Human Cloning
- Several groups are trying to isolate ES cells
from cloned human embryos - Advanced Cell TechnologyCibelli et al., 2001.
- Roger Pedersenformerly of UCSF
- Lu Guangxiu (China)isolated ES cells from human
blastocysts? - Several groups are reportedly trying to produce
children from adult nuclear donors
24Dr. Severino Antinori and Dr. Panos Zavos
25Dr. Brigitte Boisselier with Rael
26- A human clone has no genetic contribution from
the mother. If an infertile couple uses human
cloning to obtain offspring, they will use the
nucleus of the somatic cells of the husband for
implantation into the enucleated egg of the
mother. The resulting clone will always be a male
who possesses only the characteristics of the
father
27- In 2001, a few fertility researchers in the
United States and in Italy have begun
experimenting on human cloning. Many infertile
couples have already volunteered their sex cells
for these experiments. These scientists claim
that they will have successful results in two
years and predicted that the expenses of human
cloning will be comparable to artificial
insemination.
28- When the somatic cells from an adult individual
are cultivated in the laboratory, they will only
divide and develop into the same kind of somatic
cells. However, when stem cells derived from
human embryo are established as cell lines that
can perpetually divide in the laboratory, they
can develop into various kinds of human tissues.
29- These totipotent characteristics of the human
stem cells are most promising for medical
research since these cells can be exploited to
become potential sources of human transplants to
replace damaged tissues in many incurable
diseases.
30Technology of Stem Cell Research
31- Potential benefits of human cloning and stem cell
research
32- Â
- One in 6 couples in developed countries on the
average is infertile due to genetic or
environmental causes. Artificial insemination and
human cloning are amongst the techniques that can
help these infertile couples to conceive and
fulfill their desires for procreation.
33- In an animal study, Dr. McKay and his
colleagues Lorenz Studer, M.D., and Viviane
Tabar, M.D., took neural stem cells from the
brains of rat embryos and grew them in culture
dishes with a protein called basic fibroblast
growth factor that helps the cells survive and
divide. After the cells multiplied for 6 to 8
days, the growth factor was removed and the cells
were allowed to aggregate into free-floating
spheres of neurons. The neurons in the spheres
began to develop functioning connections with
each other, producing dopamine as well as several
other kinds of neurotransmitters. When the
spheres were injected into the brains of rats
that were missing the dopamine-producing region
on one side of their brains, the rats
Parkinsonian symptoms gradually diminished. Most
showed about a 75 percent improvement in motor
function 80 days after they received the
transplants. - Â
34- Stem cells can be one of the sources for human
transplants. For example, scientists have
successfully cultivated nerve cells that secret
dopamine, a neurotransmitter, from embryonic stem
cells. These cells are transplanted into the
bodies of patients suffering from Parkinsons
disease in whom the defective nervous system
lacks dopamine. Their bodies then acquired the
ability to secret dopamine and they are cured.
Despite opposing results and side effects that
are yet to be totally understood and controlled,
embryonic stem cells seem to also pose promises
for other incurable diseases such as diabetes.
35- Medical and Ethical Challenges
36- There are web sites offering human sex cells for
sale. Sperms of Nobel laureates and eggs of
beautiful models or female students of
prestigious institutions of higher learning are
collected and sold to the highest bidders
37- Molecular biologist Professor Lee Silver of
Princeton University predicted that the 21st
century will divide human societies into two
groups according the cloning technology - The GeneRich
- those who are able and/or willing to clone
themselves, - The Naturals
- those that are unable and/or unwilling to
clone themselves
38- A brave new world envisioned by the eugenic
movement will become a reality. Unscrupulous
entrepreneurs and aggressive politicians will use
reproductive technologies such as human cloning
and genetic manipulation to control human
populations and monopolize market economy. The
net effect may be the polarization of the rich
and the poor, the haves and the have-nots.
Totalitarian regimes can exploit the eugenic
movement to eliminate the unfit of human
societies!
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40- Are human clones really human?
41- When Dolly was born, she was not an infant sheep
since she carries the genetic material of the
nuclear donor. Adult body cells are known to
gradually lose their telomers (the end sequences
in the linear chromosomes of most eukaryotic
cells) because of the lack of telomerase, an
enzyme found in tumor or embryonic cells which
can lengthen the telomers during cell division.
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43- As a result, the life expectancy of Dolly is
shorter than a newborn sheep. In addition, Dolly
has obesity problem. At 6, she was given a lethal
injection after veterinarians discovered she had
lung cancer. Normal life span of sheep is 12
years. These symptoms that are associated
with premature aging are also - found in other cloned
- animals.
44Wilmut listed defects occurring regularly in
other cloned animals, including gigantism
(excessive size) in cloned sheep and cattle
placentas of up to four times the normal size in
mice and heart defects in pigs. Despite being
given normal amounts of food, many cloned mice
also become grotesquely fat, while many cloned
cows, sheep and pigs have developmental
difficulties, lung problems and malfunctioning
immune systems. Cloned animals have also shown
a variety of individual defects. A calf cloned in
France appeared to be thriving but suddenly died
at 51 days old after a failure in its ability to
produce white blood cells. Similarly, scientists
at Roslin had to put down a cloned lamb at 12
days old because the muscles around its lungs
were so abnormally thick that it could hardly
breathe.
45- Moreover, the success rate of cloned animals is
extremely low. Dolly was born after 277
unsuccessful trials. It will be a horrendous
waste of human embryos if similar experiments are
carried out in the attempts to clone humans when
more than 99 of them are destroyed.
46- Human clones are not only facing health problems,
they are also faced with psychological pressures.
He/She always lives under the shadow of his/her
nuclear donors and will not have the normal self
image developed in the traditional nuclear family
with biological parents.
47- Embryonic stems cells can be developed from
discarded fertilized eggs in fertility clinics,
aborted or miscarried fetuses. Whenever a human
fetus is cultivated in the laboratory to develop
into stem cells, it is no longer viable as a
human fetus. In other words, the embryo is
destroyed.
48- In what stage of embryonic development is the
fertilized egg accorded the status of a human
being who is entitled to human right protection?
49- In the context of human transplants, should we
sacrifice one life in order to save another life?
50- In fact, recent successes with adult stem cells
make them a non-controversial and promising
alternative to embryonic stem cells. These
rapidly dividing adult cells, such as cells
derived from bone marrow, placenta, cord blood,
are also capable of developing into totipotent
cells. They can also pose promises as potential
source of human transplants.
51Promises of Adult Stem Cell Research
Cells isolated from murine skeletal muscle have a
remarkable capacity for hematopoietic
differentiation
Hematopoietic potential of stem cells isolated
from murine skeletal muscle Kathyjo Ann Jackson,
Tiejuan Mi, and Margaret A. Goode Proc Natl Acad
Sci U S A. 1999 December 7 96(25) 1448214486 -
52Embryonic Stem Cells, Cloning, Are Not
Necessarily Path To Cure
- 1. Embryonic stem cells have produced
disappointing results for juvenile diabetes - Because of the difficulty of getting ESCs to
differentiate into desired tissues, the risk of
tumor formation, the genetic instability of ESCs
in culture, and other problems, ESCs cannot be
expected to provide treatments for juvenile
diabetes anytime soon. - S. Sipione et al., Insulin expressing
cells from differentiated embryonic stem cells
are not beta cells, 47 Diabetologia 499-508
(2004).
53Embryonic Stem Cells, Cloning, Are Not
Necessarily Path To Cure
- 2. ADULT islet cells have reversed juvenile
diabetes in hundreds of patients in clinical
trial - of the 250 patients who have received the
newest version of the transplant, more than 80
percent have been free from insulin shots or
insulin pumps for more than a year . - D. Wahlberg, New islet cells put into
liver, The Atlanta Journal- Constitution, June
1, 2003, at www.ajc.com/health/content/health/spec
ial/0603/01exdiabetic_sidebar.html.
54Embryonic Stem Cells, Cloning, Are Not
Necessarily Path To Cure
- 3. Problems of supply and tissue rejection in the
Edmonton protocol are being addressed. - NIH researchers have shown that a prior
transplant of adult bone marrow stem cells can
prevent rejection of islet cell transplants in
mice, without use of anti-rejection drugs - News Release, American Society of
Hematology, Researchers Look to Stem Cell
Therapy and Bone Marrow Transplants to Find a
Cure for Diabetes, December 8, 2003, at
www.hematology.org/news/press/press_120903_5.cfm?p
agemodeprint -
55Embryonic Stem Cells, Cloning, Are Not
Necessarily Path To Cure
- 4. ADULT stem cells are advancing to create
entirely new therapies for juvenile diabetes. - Researchers in Canada have shown that
transplanted adult stem cells from bone marrow
can cause pancreatic tissue to repair itself,
restoring normal insulin production and reversing
symptoms of diabetes. - Transplanted Bone Marrow Stem Cells
Reverse Diabetes in Mice, JDRF Countdown, Fall
2003, p. 6. See D. Hess et al., Bone
marrow-derived stem cells initiate pancreatic
regeneration, 21 Nature Biotechnology 763-70
(2003).
56Embryonic Stem Cells, Cloning, Are Not
Necessarily Path To Cure
- 5. Therapeutic Cloning is Useless in Treating
Juvenile Diabetes - autoimmune diseases, including type 1
diabetes. In such cases transfer of
immunologically identical cells to a patient is
expected to induce the same rejection . - I. Wilmut, Human cells from cloned
embryos in research and therapy, 328 British
Medical Journal 415-6 (2004)
57- The United States House of Representatives have
voted to ban research on human cloning - The President of the United States has also
recently decided that federal support will not be
available to support any research based on
embryonic stem cells created after August 9,
2001.
58- Guidelines according to Ethical Principles
- (J. F. Kilner)
59(1) Principle of Utility
- 1. Unjust allocation of limited medical resources
- 2. Genetically engineering people (without their
consent) only for the benefit of others.
60(2) Principle of Autonomy
- 1. Great Risk to the Clones life.
- 2. Conflict with the Autonomy of the Clones.
61(3) Principle of Human Dignity, Being Human per
se
- 1. Comprehensiveness Applies to All humans?
- 2. Consistency Things of Value?
- 3. Credibility Reducible to one or more
characteristics?
62- Guidelines according to the Scriptures
63- After the first human couple sinned, the human
race has been subject to death, disease and pain
(Gen. 3). The paradox of a loving Creator
allowing human suffering is only resolved in the
Incarnation, Crucifixion and Resurrection of our
Lord Jesus Christ.
64- (A) The purpose of human life is for the glory
of God. God created us for His glory.(Is. 437).
65- While eliminating human suffering is a noble
cause, there may be a higher purpose for some
incurable diseases after all human efforts are
exhausted, as Paul has experienced from the thorn
in his flesh. (II Cor. 127-9) Jesus did not
confront the origins of congenital diseases. Yet
He made it clear that the ultimate purpose of the
healing of the man blind from birth was that the
works of God might be displayed in him (Jn.
93).
66- Infertile couples should not pursue human cloning
that risks the destruction of potential lives or
creating defective human embryos in their
attempts to have biological offspring. This is
exactly the reason used by the mainstream
scientific establishment to oppose
experimentation on human cloning. Infertile
couples should explore other avenues of having
children such as adoption of unwanted children.
67- (B) Human Being, Created in the Image of God,
Became a Living Being by the Direct Involvement
of God.
68- Humans were created in the Image of God. (Gen. 1
26-27). Gods act of the breathing into the
nostrils of man the breath of life to make him a
living being (Gen. 27) strongly suggests a
direct involvement of God in mans life. After
the creation of the first couple, the capability
for procreation or the potentials of the human
gene pool that generated the entire human race is
also divinely endowed. (Gen. 128, 2 24).
69- The Scriptures emphasize children are the
inheritance given by God (Ps. 1273). Invitro
fertilization using the sex cells of an infertile
couple and implantation of these artificially
inseminated embryos into the wifes uterus has
been successfully carried out. These children can
be a gift of God made possible by good
stewardship on the parts of scientists who
develop these technologies.
70- However, if the sole purpose of artificial
insemination is to create human embryos for
experiments in human cloning, then the line of
violation of human rights may have been crossed.
Human clones are products of asexual reproduction
which lacks the normal process of genetic
recombination during meiosis characteristic of
sexual reproduction that gives rise to variations
amongst the offspring of a couple. In addition,
human clones will have shorter life spans. Even
though the technology of human cloning can be
improved, the human clones will live in the
perpetuate shadow of identity crisis. They will
always be second-class citizens. Humans are
always an end in themselves, never a means. - Â
71Conclusion
- Establishment of Scriptural principles that will
safeguard human dignity and prevent abuse of
human rights for reproductive technologies.
72http//www.bioethics.gov/