© Naomi
Tajitsu / Reuters
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Organs
which could be used for human transplants are being grown in farm animals for
the first time in an attempt to solve the global shortage of donors and push
the boundaries of medical science, it has been revealed.
Some
50 sheep and pigs have been implanted with the embryos of human/animal
‘chimera’. Scientists hope the genetically-modified beasts will grow human
organs suitable for transplant.
While
the experimental science has not yet taken place in the UK, the government’s
animal research advisers are expected to give the technique the thumbs up when
they publish legal guidelines on the practice this week.
However,
animal rights groups have called the methods ‘Frankenscience’, arguing it is
cruel to create genetically-modified animals.
National
Health Service (NHS) figures show 429 people died in 2014 while waiting for an
organ transplant in Britain. Animal-grown organs could radically reduce this
number.
Twenty
farm animals in the US and roughly 30 more worldwide have been impregnated with
the chimera embryos, the MIT Technology Review estimates. In the US, the
livestock have been impregnated at university research labs.
In
order to create the chimeras, scientists first remove the genes for a specific
organ from an animal embryo. They then replace these with human stem cells. The
modified embryo is then placed in the womb of a sheep or pig, where it grows
containing a human organ.
As
yet, none of these chimeras have been born. Scientists predict it may be
several years before their safety for use in humans is tested.
Assistant
professor of animal science at the University of California, Pablo Ross, said
they are currently only allowed to grow the embryos in female pigs for two
weeks.
Bruce
Whitelaw, a professor at the University of Edinburgh, expressed an interest in
the project coming to British universities.
“It
is scientifically fascinating and of potential commercial interest, and offers
much for healthy, productive social debate,” he said.
However,
Julia Baines from animal protection society PETA UK called the creation of such
hybrids “Frankenscience.”
“Creating human-animal
hybrids is bad for people and worse for animals. To create animals containing
human material, animal mothers undergo invasive procedures to harvest their
eggs and implant embryos. These animals have exactly the same capacity to feel
pain and suffer as any other animal, including humans,” Baines said.
Originally published in RT USA
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