Scientists use
'therapeutic cloning' to fix mitochondrial genes
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[July 16, 2015]
By Julie Steenhuysen
CHICAGO (Reuters) - U.S. researchers have
used a controversial cloning technique to make new, healthy, perfectly
matched stem cells from the skin of patients with mitochondrial diseases
in a first step toward treatment for these incurable, life-threatening
conditions.
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A study on the technique, published in the journal Nature, showcases
the latest advance in the use of somatic-cell nuclear transfer to
make patient-specific stem cells that could be used to treat genetic
diseases.
"This work enables the generation of an unlimited – and
mutation-free – supply of replacement cells for patients with
mitochondrial disease," said Dr. Robert Lanza, Chief Scientific
Officer at Advanced Cell Technology, who was not involved in the
research.
Nuclear transfer is typically the first step in reproductive cloning
- using adult cells to make a genetic copy of an individual. Since
the technique was first used in 1996 to create the cloned sheep
Dolly, the United Nations has urged countries to ban it on ethical
and moral grounds.
In 2013, Shoukhrat Mitalipov of Oregon Health and Science University
was the first to succeed using the method to make human embryonic
stem cells from a patient's skin cells. The cells are prized because
they are "pluripotent," meaning they have the ability to transform
into any type of cell in the body.
In his latest study, Mitalipov and colleagues used the method to
make replacement cells for patients with mutations in mitochondrial
genes, which are critical for producing energy in cells.
Mitochondrial genes have evaded scientists' efforts to correct such
mutations, Mitalipov said.
For the study, the team removed the nucleus of patients' cells and
implanted them into unfertilized human eggs in which the
mitochondria remained, but the rest of the DNA was removed. They
then coaxed the eggs into dividing, producing embryonic stem cells
which could be used to make healthy heart or nerve stem cells to
replace the patient's diseased cells.
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The researchers also showed that they could produce healthy
embryonic-like stem cells using another method in which they
reprogram adult skin cells through the introduction of several
genes, a method that does not involve the use of eggs.
Lanza said several clinical trials are underway globally testing
pluripotent stem cell-derived therapies in humans, including
treatments for diabetes, and eye and heart disease.
The work was funded by the Leducq Foundation, a private French
foundation.
(Reporting by Julie Steenhuysen; Editing by Andrew Hay)
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