Chimera: sheep have 15 per cent human cells and 85 per cent animal cells
Scientists have created the world's first human-sheep chimera - which has the body of a sheep and half-human organs.
The sheep have 15 per cent human cells and 85 per cent animal cells - and their evolution brings the prospect of animal organs being transplanted into humans one step closer.
Professor Esmail Zanjani, of the University of Nevada, has spent seven years and £5 million perfecting the technique, which involves injecting adult human cells into a sheep's foetus.
He has already created a sheep liver which has a large proportion of human cells and eventually hopes to precisely match a sheep to a transplant patient, using their own stem cells to create their own flock of sheep.
The process would involve extracting stem cells from the donor's bone marrow and injecting them into the peritoneum of a sheep's foetus. When the lamb is born, two months later, it would have a liver, heart, lungs and brain that are partly human and available for transplant.
"We would take a couple of ounces of bone marrow cells from the patient,' said Prof Zanjani...
"We would isolate the stem cells from them, inject them into the peritoneum of these animals and then these cells would get distributed throughout the metabolic system into the circulatory system of all the organs in the body. The two ounces of stem cell or bone marrow cell we get would provide enough stem cells to do about ten foetuses. So you don't just have one organ for transplant purposes, you have many available in case the first one fails."
At present 7,168 patients are waiting for an organ transplant in Britain alone, and two thirds of them are expected to die before an organ becomes available.
Scientists at King's College, London, and the North East Stem Cell Institute in Newcastle have now applied to the HFEA, the Government's fertility watchdog, for permission to start work on the chimeras.
But the development is likely to revive criticisms about scientists playing God, with the possibility of silent viruses, which are harmless in animals, being introduced into the human race.
Dr Patrick Dixon, an international lecturer on biological trends, warned: "Many silent viruses could create a biological nightmare in humans. Mutant animal viruses are a real threat, as we have seen with HIV."
Animal rights activists fear that if the cells get mixed together, they could end up with cellular fusion, creating a hybrid which would have the features and characteristics of both man and sheep. But Prof Zanjani said: "Transplanting the cells into foetal sheep at this early stage does not result in fusion at all."
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29th March 2007 13:09 #1
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Now scientists create a sheep that's 15% human
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29th March 2007 23:48 #2
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Oh my Allah... don't really know what to make of this. i'm disgusted in a way...
maybe it's the title that disgusts me more than the 'ability' to do the transplant.
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30th March 2007 01:04 #3
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i'm concerned....the goal may be right but the rest isn't
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30th March 2007 05:30 #4
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yeah... i agree Ch_M.... and the guy who did this... "Esmail Zanjani"... sounds muslim
NEVER grow up
Al Imran 147 - BE OPTIMISTIC!!
your ≠ you’re


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1st April 2007 00:59 #5
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yes noticed the name.
so what's next, 20% human? 50% or 80% human creatures?
Just to cure some people?
I know, when one faces death one wants to find every (every!) way to stay alive, but i would feel so guilty to be alive by using these animals....
not that i need donor organs..
for those who need it it can be a solution, special created creatures is just unfair.
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2nd April 2007 07:26 #6
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yeah - but i don't think animals w/ a certain percentage of human genes in them can survive. Allah created each animal with its own genes so it can function in the way its supposed to function. People just don't realize that if you mess w/ mother nature, she's gonna come back at you w/ her big teez shibshib...
NEVER grow up
Al Imran 147 - BE OPTIMISTIC!!
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5th April 2007 03:15 #7
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5 April 2007 -- The [British] Government's intention to ban experiments with hybridised animal-human embryos has come under fierce criticism from MPs, scientists and a phalanx of medical charities.
A letter delivered today to Tony Blair from 223 medical research charities warns that a ban on the creation of "chimera" embryos will hamper efforts to develop effective treatments for many incurable conditions. Scientists have proposed taking DNA from human skin cells and merging it with the cytoplasm - the non-nucleus part of the cell - of the unfertilised egg of a rabbit or cow.
They want to create stem cells from cloned embryos for studying conditions such as Parkinson's disease and motor neurone disease. However, the Human Fertilisation and Embryology Authority (HFEA) has postponed a decision on awarding licences until the Government clarifies its threat to ban such research.
Sophie Petit-Zeman, from the Association of Medical Research Charities, said that there is an overwhelming consensus about the need for such research among medical charities involved with financing studies into serious diseases.
"To our knowledge, a letter to government signed by 223 medical research charities and patient organisations is unprecedented. These groups are urging the Government to sanction research which has the potential to offer vital insights," Dr Petit-Zeman said.
The letter comes on the same day that the Science and Technology Committee of the House of Commons criticises the Government and the HFEA for their opposition to research using chimera embryos.
"We find that the creation of human-animal chimera or hybrid embryos, and specifically cytoplasmic hybrid embryos, is necessary for research," the committee says in its report published today. "We are critical of the HFEA for delaying assessment of applications for licences to create cytoplasmic hybrid embryos for research."
Official concern goes back to a report in 2000 by experts led by Sir Liam Donaldson, the Chief Medical Officer. The report said: "The use of eggs from a non-human species to carry a human cell nucleus was not a realistic or desirable solution to the possible lack of human eggs for research or subsequent treatment."
A subsequent public consultation exercise by the Government attracted about 300 responses, of which 277 were opposed to such research - although the majority were from organised lobby groups.
Nevertheless, the scale of the opposition led the Department of Health to propose a ban, although a White Paper on reforming the Human Fertilisation and Embryology Act confusingly allowed for the creation of hybrid embryos "under licence" for research purposes.
The science and technology committee's report, however, questioned whether the consultation was truly representative.
"We regard the consultation exercise as deeply flawed. All it did was count numbers," said Phil Willis, the Liberal Democrat MP for Harrogate and Knaresborough, who chaired the Commons select committee. "This is a test of the Government's commitment to science. We very much hope that the department will listen and reflect on the committee's conclusions when the draft Tissue and Embryos Bill is published next month," he added.
The Royal Society and other scientific organisations have lent their support to moves to prevent the ban from being included in the forthcoming legislation. Sir Richard Gardner, who is chairman of the society's stem cell working group, said that the embryos should be permitted for the benefit of future research.
"The technique to create human-animal cytoplasmic hybrids ... has only emerged in the past five years," Sir Richard said. "We do not know what possibilities might emerge in the next five years so it is vital that new legislation can accommodate scientific breakthroughs," he said.
Three groups of scientists are known to want licences. Two have had their applications postponed and the third is expected to make an application once the present situation is clarified.
Chimeras: what, how and why
What is a chimera embryo?
A chimera is an organism comprising cells from two different species. In this case, the genetic material of the animal has been almost entirely removed so the embryo is 99.5 per cent human. Technically, the animal-human embryo is neither a chimera nor a hybrid, it is a "cytoplasmic hybrid embryo", or "cybrid".
How are these hybrid embryos created?
The nucleus of an unfertilised egg cell from a rabbit or cow is removed, leaving a shell filled with the cell's non-nuclear cytoplasm. A nucleus from a human skin cell is injected and stimulated with electricity to form a cloned human embryo.
Why do scientists want to create such embryos?
There is a shortage of human eggs. Scientists want to create embryonic stem cells from these embryos. If the human cells are from a Parkinson's patient or someone suffering from motor neurone disease, the resulting stem cells could be used to develop nerve tissue or brain cells, thereby providing an experimental "model" to test treatments.
What are the objections?
Some say that it demeans animals. Others argue that it demeans human life because each embryo is a potential human being. There is no evidence to suggest that the chimeras would ever develop normally in the womb, and in any case, it would be illegal to allow them to develop beyond 14 days.
Is this research allowed elsewhere?
China is leading the way, having already created stem cells from human embryos created from rabbit eggs.







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