"Making Embryos in a Dish" Protects Babies From DNA Mutation
Gene editing tools such as CRISPR are helping
researchers
who hope to cure cancer and other problems involving
DNA,
but "making embryos in a dish" is a much easier way
to check for
mutations before implanting an embryo in a
mother's uterus, according
to an American Cancer Society
professor.
"Gene editing, or CRISPR, is enormously helpful
for us at the research
level," said Mary-Clare King,
American Cancer Society professor of
Genome Sciences and
Medicine at Seattle's University of Washington.
"We work
with CRISPR using cells in plates. We alter the cells and
we
see what works, and what doesn't, by way of treating
the cells that
we've altered. I think of it as a research
tool," Ms. King said in an
interview on February 1.
"I
don't think of it as a tool that will ever be deployed for
actually
correcting these kinds of cells, because there
are a lot of easier
ways to do it."
Ms. King was
visiting Bangkok to receive Thailand's annual
Prince
Mahidol Award along with three other recipients
for their work in
medicine and public health.
She
"discovered a gene causing breast cancer, the most common
cancer
among women," the award foundation said. "In
1991, Prof. King found a
gene called BRCA1, in which its
mutation leads to breast cancer. It
was demonstrated for
the first time that the diseases can
be
inherited."
Some scientists are currently
experimenting with CRISPR to change DNA
in human embryos
so newborns would be free of inherited diseases
passed on
from generation to generation via mutations.
In China, a
scientist is being investigated for claiming to
have
edited the genes of babies to ensure they are safe
from HIV.
Much easier than editing DNA with CRISPR "for
breast cancer
predisposition and for far more serious
diseases that can't be
prevented, is to couple genetic
diagnosis -- that is the
identification of the exact DNA
mutations that are responsible for a
trait -- with
pre-gestational diagnosis," Ms. King said.
"This strategy
involves taking mother's eggs and father's sperm from
the
biological parents. No surrogates. No editing. No anything.
Making
embryos in a dish. Testing the embryo at the
eight-cell stage by
removing one cell, which is fine, the
embryo just grows it back. And
then checking if that
embryo is free of the mutations that are present
in one,
or the other, or both of the parents.
"If that embryo is
free of those mutations, we implant it in the
mother's
uterus and she goes on and has a healthy child.
That
strategy, coupled with genetic diagnosis, is
enormously powerful. It
doesn't involve any CRISPR
editing," she said.
"There is no danger there for any sort
of untoward consequences,
because you're not doing
anything to the cells except checking them.
You're not
doing anything that alters the cells. You're simply
being
sure that you have a healthy embryo.
"No abortion
is involved. No termination is involved. No editing
is
involved. So why the hell would anyone edit, when in
fact you can do
this properly with modern technology to
find out exactly what's wrong
and then make sure that the
mother will be carrying an embryo that's
just right," Ms.
King said.
National Public Radio reported on February 1
that developmental
biologist Dieter Egli at Columbia
University in New York said he is
conducting human embryo
experiments "for research purposes."
Mr. Egli said he
wanted to determine whether CRISPR can safely
repair
mutations in human embryos to prevent genetic
diseases from being
passed down from earlier
generations.
"So far, Egli has stopped any modified
embryos from developing beyond
one day, so he can study
them," NPR reported.
"Right now we are not trying to make
babies. None of these cells will
go into the womb of a
person," Mr. Egli said.
He was studying ways of preventing
congenital illnesses such as
Tay-Sachs, cystic fibrosis,
Huntington's disease
and inherited
blindness.
***
Richard S. Ehrlich is a Bangkok-based
journalist from San Francisco,
California, reporting news
from Asia since 1978 and winner of Columbia
University's
Foreign Correspondent's Award. He co-authored
three
non-fiction books about Thailand, including "'Hello
My Big Big Honey!'
Love Letters to Bangkok Bar Girls and
Their Revealing Interviews," "60
Stories of Royal
Lineage," and "Chronicle of Thailand: Headline News
Since
1946." Mr. Ehrlich also contributed to the chapter
"Ceremonies
and Regalia" in a book published in English
and Thai titled, "King
Bhumibol Adulyadej, A Life's Work:
Thailand's Monarchy in
Perspective." Mr. Ehrlich's newest
book, "Sheila Carfenders, Doctor
Mask & President Akimbo"
portrays a 22-year-old American female mental
patient who
is abducted to Asia by her abusive San
Francisco
psychiatrist.
His online sites are:
https://asia-correspondent.tumblr.com
https://www.amazon.com/Hello-Big-Honey-Revealing-Interviews/dp/1717006418
https://www.amazon.com/Sheila-Carfenders-Doctor-President-Akimbo/dp/1973789353/
https://www.facebook.com/SheilaCarfenders