Title: The Revolution in Cell Technology
1The Revolution in Cell Technology
2Proving That Reproductive Cloning is Possible
- Hans Spemann proposed in 1938 that cloning might
be possible by removing the nucleus from an egg
cell and replacing with a nucleus from another
cell - early attempts in cloning were unsuccessful
unless the transplanted nucleus was from a very
early stage of development - the theory of irreversible determination
suggested that animal cells become irreversibly
committed after the first cell divisions
3A cloning experiment
4Proving That Reproductive Cloning is Possible
- Geneticists working in Scotland made a key
breakthrough in animal cloning - Keith Campbell suggested they conduct nuclear
transfers between a donor and recipient cell that
were at identical stages of the cell cycle - the cells were starved so that they were at the
beginning of the cell cycle at the G1 checkpoint - Neil First in 1994 and Campbell and Ian Wilmut in
1995 successfully cloned farm animals from
advanced embryos using this method
5Proving That Reproductive Cloning is Possible
- Wilmut progressed with the method to transfer
successfully a nucleus from an adult cell into an
enucleated egg - Wilmut used an adult sheeps mammary gland as the
nuclear donor - both the donor mammary cells and the enucleated
eggs were first starved and a brief electrical
shock allowed the contents to fuse together - the resulting embryos developed into blastulae
and were implanted into a surrogate mother - Dolly the cloned lamb was born on July 5, 1996
6Wilmuts animal cloning experiment
7A parade of cloned critters
8Problems with Reproductive Cloning
- many problems have been encountered with
reproductive cloning since Dolly - most transplanted cloned embryos die late in
pregnancy - large offspring syndrome
- describes the oversized condition of many of
these transplants - among surviving cloned offspring, their
development into adults goes unexpectedly haywire - most do not survive to live a normal life span
- Dolly died prematurely in 2002
9Problems with Reproductive Cloning
- Reprogramming by parent males and females of the
sperm and eggs may affect cloning success - genomic imprinting
- Chemical changes to DNA that alters when genes
are expressed without changing the sequences - Genes can be locked on or off
- Normal animal development depends on precise
genomic imprinting
10Problems with Reproductive Cloning
- genomic imprinting occurs at different stages
- gametic imprinting
- takes place in adult reproductive tissue
- requires months for sperm and years for eggs
- zygotic imprinting
- the egg cell cytoplasm acts to reprogram the DNA
introduced by the sperm - donor DNA to be cloned may be less efficient at
doing this reprogramming
11Two forms of genomic imprinting
12Embryonic Stem Cells
- embryonic stem cells are totipotent
- Have the ability to form any body tissue, and
even an adult animal - later in development the embryonic stem cells
differentiate into adult stem cells - these cells produce only one kind of tissue
- the genes needed to produce other types of
tissues are turned off
13Human embryonic stem cells (x20)
14Embryonic Stem Cells
- Offer the possibility of restoring damaged
tissues - Embryonic stem cells grown in culture could be
induced to form any type of tissue in the body - Healthy tissue can be injected into a patient
where it will grow and replace damaged tissue
15Using embryonic stem cells to restore damaged
tissue
16Therapeutic Cloning
- What happens when immune rejection of
transplanted stem cells occurs?? - DNA from adult cells are used to create an embryo
from an individual - stem cells are then harvested from the embryo,
which is subsequently destroyed - the tissue developed from these stem cells can be
injected into the damaged host - there is no issue of immunological tolerance
because the donor and recipient of the stem cell
therapy are the same individual
17How human embryos might be used for therapeutic
cloning
18Grappling with the Ethics of Stem Cell Research
- Use of embryonic stem cells raises a number of
important ethical concerns, including - should human embryos be destroyed?
- how can the potential for future abuse be
avoided? - are there alternative sources to using embryonic
stem cells?
19Initial Attempts at Gene Therapy
- gene transfer therapy
- Transferring healthy versions of a gene into
cells that lack them - while the research is promising, problems remain
in finding an appropriate vector for gene
transfer - adenovirus vector used to piggyback healthy genes
- subject to immune attack and prone to introduce
mutations that lead to cancer
20Initial Attempts at Gene Therapy
21More Promising Vectors
- adeno-associated virus (AAV) is a more promising
choice for vector - this parvovirus needs adenovirus to replicate but
is a good gene carrier once its two genes are
removed - it infects easily but, when the AAV genes are
removed, does not produce an immune response or
introduce cancerous mutations
22Using gene therapy to cure a retinal degenerative
disease in dogs
23Ethical Issues Raised by Gene Therapy
- ethicists prefer the term gene intervention in
lieu of gene therapy to describe any procedure
that deliberately alters a persons genes - it is important to consider the permanence of
these changes - changes to somatic tissue are not inherited
- changes to germ-line tissues are inherited
24Ethical Issues Raised by Gene Therapy
- beneficence principle
- ethicists use this to weigh the risks versus the
benefits when making decisions about potential
therapy - respect-for-persons principle
- ethicists respect the right of persons affected
by the procedure to make their own informed
decisions
25Inquiry Analysis
- Judging by visual similarity, which adult dog is
the closer relative of Snuppy? - What evidence would you accept that Snuppy is
indeed a clone?
Photo of Snuppy, with his Clone Dad and Surrogate
Mom