Slashdot Mirror


Cloning License for Dolly's Doc

Rollie Hawk writes "Ian Wilmut, leader of Dolly the sheep's team and Professor at the Roslin Institute in Edinburgh, has been given the green light by the British government's Human Fertilisation and Embryology Authority to start further cloning research. As a matter of fact, he is now a licensed human cloner. The license has a duration of one year and is the second of its kind given by Britain, the first country to officially sanction human cloning research. Research will be focusing on motor neurone disease (MND). The team hopes to perform cell nuclear replacement on the skin cells of MND victims in order to create stem cells, the jack-of-all-trades of the cell family and the supposed magic bullets for ailments ranging from Alzheimer's to paralysis.

11 of 290 comments (clear)

  1. welcome by kevinx · · Score: 5, Funny

    I certainly welcome our new cloned human overlords..
    as long as they all look like the olsen twins.

  2. Re:Is this a good idea AT THIS TIME? by lederhosen · · Score: 5, Insightful

    >...but I think with the current
    >knowledge of this subject...

    How can we gain knowledge if we don't do research?

  3. Clone rights by Spoonito · · Score: 5, Funny

    Clones are people two.

    10 print "clones are people" $d
    20 let $d = pun
    30 gosub hilarity

    --
    "show me all the blueprint show me all the blueprint show me all the blueprints"
  4. Re:So..... by Dr+Caleb · · Score: 5, Funny
    So who got the first one?

    Some guy who looks just like him.

    --
    "History doesn't repeat itself, but it does rhyme." Mark Twain
  5. Re:Thank you Bush! by TheMeuge · · Score: 5, Insightful

    As much as the parent can be considered a troll, he/she is right. The pressure of religious ethics of the right wing Christians, along with this administration's spite towards science, will result in rapid elimination of the slim lead that the US has been maintaining in medical and basic research.

  6. Re:So..... by jacob_jackson · · Score: 5, Informative

    Last August, a team of scientists from Newcastle University in northern England was granted a license to clone human embryos to develop new treatments for diabetes and degenerative diseases such as Alzheimer's and Parkinson's (http://www.reuters.com/newsArticle.jhtml?type=hea lthNews&storyID=7569803&pageNumber=1)

  7. Re:Is this a good idea AT THIS TIME? by lederhosen · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I have big problem with people fiddle around with genetics. But you do have to think about what is good and what is bad. I have *no* problem whatsoever with
    cloning though I have serious problem with modifying genes that are inherited.

    Go ahead and clone cells for cancer treatment, and deseases, but wait with messing with genes that will
    be left for all comming generations (at least untill we really know what we are doing.

    Sadly, it seams to be the other way around, mix genes of fish with potatoes, modify corn etc, things that *may* cause severe problems in the
    future people seams to accept. But when you
    *clone* something, everyone screams, think about our children, when it is realy totaly harmless

  8. copyright issues? by de1orean · · Score: 5, Funny

    the RIAA is watching these developments closely.

  9. Re:Genetic material question by InternationalCow · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The egg contains mitochondria, and, indeed, some motor neuron diseases are indirectly linked to mitochondrial dysfunction. If bad mitochondria cause the disease, problem solved, as the mitochondria are not from the person with MND. However, most motor neuron diseases that we know of and are connected to mitochondrial dysfunction are actually caused by problems in nuclear genes - case in point being amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (aka Lou Gehrig's disease), which is related to mutations in superoxide dismutase. The dysfunctioning of this protein in turn affects mitochondrial function leading to increased apoptosis, etc.. Apart from that, tackling degenerative disease using stem cells is probably not going to work in many cases - many of those diseases may not be caused by cell-autonomous processes, which means that whatever is killing the motor neurons is going to kill the stem cells as well. Stem cells may however be very useful for repopulating purposes, if we can get them to differentiate in the right way in the right place.

    --
    ----- One learns to itch where one can scratch.
  10. Re:Certainty by jackelfish · · Score: 5, Informative

    They are not creating embryos, they are attempting to create pluripotent cells, from skin cells, in an attempt to replace malfunctioning neurons. There is not an entire organism involved here as they are not using gametes (eggs or sperm) in these experiments. This is where the term "cloning" becomes confused, in that many people think it always refers to the duplication of a whole organism (such as Dolly) where it simply means to insert foreign DNA into a cell.

    --
    "When Nature Calls We All Shall Drown" Johan Edlund
  11. Re:Is this a good idea AT THIS TIME? by Gauchito · · Score: 5, Insightful

    vague fears about Things Man Was Not Meant To Know.

    That's not the reason people object to this kind of research. The main question in this whole argument is the one that neither side can agree on: at what point do we start being a living human being, and the killing of that human being becomes murder? At conception or some arbitrary point later (e.g., brain is fully formed, a neuron grows, all fingers are there, etc.)? Every other point in this discussion stems from that one question, for which there seems to be no objective answer, because we don't have a clear, unanimous idea of what it actually means to be human.