Gene-Therapy Technique News: Panel OKs Creation of Embryos with DNA of 3 People
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A panel of experts agreed that creating an embryo from three different people is okay.
The controversial gene-therapy technique involves three individuals, a mom, dad, and an egg donor. The process replaces an embryo's energy-producing mitochondria with healthy mitochondria from the egg of the donor. This aims to prevent the transmission of diseases caused my mutations in mitochondrial DNA, NPR reported.
According to PBS, only mothers pass on the mitochondrial DNA to her children. It encodes a mere 37 genes. The defective gene leaves the cell without energy resulting to blindness, seizures, muscle degeneration, developmental disorders and even death. The severity varies.
The scientists estimate that 1 in 5,000 children inherit some degree of mitochondrial disease. This condition is difficult to treat but, with the gene-therapy technique, this can be avoided.
"It's unlikely we'll find any cure once the child is born already with these mutations," said Dr. Shoukhrat Mitalipov of Oregon Health & Sciences University. "The best way is to prevent it." Mitalipov produced five healthy monkeys using the technique and approached FDA to consider the studies for humans.
On Wednesday, 12-member panel, assembled by the National Academics of Sciences, Engineering and Medicine, released a 164-page report outlining their plans on how to ethically pursue the controversial research.
"The committee concludes that it is ethically permissible," the panel said in the report. However, there is a long list of conditions that need to be met.
Scientists would need to perform a thorough preliminary research in the laboratory and try it on the animal sample to make sure that it is safe. In the first attempts of pregnancy, researchers should only implant to male embryos because they are incapable of passing mitochondrial alterations.
As said earlier, only the females pass the mitochondria DNA to their offsprings. So, as part of safety measures, the experiment will try the male babies first.
Food and Drug Administration requested the report in response to the applications from two groups of scientists in New York and Oregon to conduct the experiments. Both groups aim to help women deliver healthy babies, even if they come from families plagued with genetic disorders.
The FDA emailed that panel and praised their "thoughtful work." They stressed that they will review the recommendations but noted that, currently, the federal budget "prevents the FDA from using funds to review applications in which a human embryo is intentionally created or modified to include."
The researchers are hopeful that this will be pursued.
"Mitochondrial DNA disease can be extremely devastating, and for the women who are at risk of passing it on to their children, they have no other option by which to pursue having a child that's genetically related to them," said Jeffrey Kahn, a bioethicist at Johns Hopkins University.