by Russ Kick
March 14, 2010
from
Disinfo Website
Spanish version
The earthshaking news appeared in the
medical journal Human Reproduction under the impenetrable
headline: “Mitochondria
in Human Offspring Derived From Ooplasmic Transplantation.”
The media put the story in heavy rotation for one day, then forgot
about it. We all forgot about it...
But the fact remains that the world is
now populated by dozens of children who were genetically
engineered.
It still sounds like science fiction,
yet it’s true.
In the first known application of germline
gene therapy - in which an
individual’s genes are changed in a way that can be passed to
offspring - doctors at a reproductive facility in New Jersey
announced in March 2001 that nearly 30 healthy babies had been born
with DNA from three people:
dad, mom, and a second woman.
Fifteen were the product of the
fertility clinic, with the other fifteen or so coming from
elsewhere.
The doctors believe that one cause for failure of women to conceive
is that their ova contain old mitochondria (if you don’t remember
your high school biology class, mitochondria are the part of cells
that provides energy). These sluggish eggs fail to attach to the
uterine wall when fertilized. In order to soup them up, scientists
injected them with mitochondria from a younger woman.
Since
mitochondria contain DNA, the kids
have the genetic material of all three parties. The DNA from the
“other woman” can even be passed down along the female line.
The big problem is that no one knows what effects this will have on
the children or their progeny.
In fact, this substitution of mitochondria hasn’t been studied
extensively on animals, never mind Homo sapiens. The doctors
reported that the kids are healthy, but they neglected to mention
something crucial. Although the fertility clinic’s technique
resulted in fifteen babies, a total of seventeen fetuses had been
created.
One of them had been aborted, and the other miscarried.
Why? Both of them had a rare genetic disorder,
Turner syndrome, which only strikes
females.
Ordinarily, just one in 2,500 females is born with this condition,
in which one of the
X chromosomes is incomplete or
totally missing. Yet two out of these seventeen fetuses had
developed it.
If we assume that nine of the fetuses were female (around 50
percent), then two of the nine female fetuses had this rare
condition. Internal documents from the fertility clinic admit that
this amazingly high rate might be due to the
ooplasmic transfer.
Even before the revelation about Turner syndrome became known, many
experts were appalled that the technique had been used.
A responding article in Human
Reproduction said, in a dry understatement:
“Neither the safety nor efficacy of
this method has been adequately investigated.”
Ruth Deech, chair of Britain’s
Human Fertilization and Embryology Authority,
told the BBC:
“There is a risk, not just to the
baby, but to future generations which we really can’t assess at
the moment.”
The number of children who have been
born as a result of this technique is unknown.
The original article gave the number as
“nearly thirty,” but this was in early 2001. At that time, at least
two of the mutant children were already one year old.
Dr. Joseph Cummin, professor emeritus of biology at the
University of Western Ontario, says that no further information
about these 30 children has appeared in the medical literature or
the media.
As far as additional children born with
two mommies and a daddy, Cummin says that a report out of Norway in
2003 indicated that ooplasmic transfer has been used to
correct mitochondrial disease.
He opines:
“It seems likely that the
transplants are going on, but very, very quietly in a regulatory
vacuum, perhaps.”
Reference
-
Genetically-Engineered Humans.
Barritt, Jason A., et al. “Mitochondria
in Human Offspring Derived From Ooplasmic Transplantation.”
Human Reproduction, 16.3 (2001), pp 513-6.
-
Email communication from Dr.
Joseph Cummins, 4 June 2003.
-
“First
Cases of Human Germline Genetic Modification Announced.”
British Medical Journal 322 (12 May 2001), p 1144.
-
“Genetically
Modified Human Babies?”
Australian Broadcasting Corporation, 8 May 2001.
-
Hawes, S.M., C. Sapienza, and K.
E. Latham. “Ooplasmic
Donation in Humans: The Potential for Epigenic Modifications.”
Human Reproduction 17.4 (2002), 850-2.
-
Hill, Amelia. “Horror
at ‘Three Parent Foetus’ Gene Disorders.”
Observer (London), 20 May 2001
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