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			by Kelley Bergman  
			April 22, 2012 
			from
			
			PreventDisease Website 
			  
			  
				
					
						| 
						Kelley Bergman is a 
						media consultant, critic and geopolitical investigator.
						 
						She has worked as a 
						journalist and writer, specializing in geostrategic 
						issues around the globe. |  
			  
			The first human eggs grown from human stem cells could be fertilized 
			with human sperm cells later this year, potentially adding one more 
			peg in the ladder toward reproduction sans human interaction.
 
			  
			In this case it would entirely bypass a 
			woman's donation of her eggs. But it could also turn stem cells into 
			an infinite loop, of egg cells into embryos into stem cells, and on 
			and on, in a fractal-like repetition of reproduction.
 
			 
			  
			In February, a study was announced 
			involving Japanese women whose reproductive stem cells were donated 
			because they were undergoing gender reassignment surgery.  
			  
			Researchers at Massachusetts General 
			Hospital were able to 
			
			coax these ovarian stem cells into becoming 
			immature human egg cells, which were then incubated in mice so 
			they’d have the proper ovarian structures. Now these same 
			scientists, working with a team at Edinburgh University, want to 
			fertilize them.
 After sperm implantation, the scientists would watch the blastocysts 
			develop into embryos for two weeks - the legal limit - and determine 
			if they’re viable.
 
			  
			Then these embryos would either be 
			frozen or "allowed to perish," according to 
			
			the Independent. The 
			tests would validate the stem-cell-derived human eggs, more properly 
			called oocytes, and could serve as an early indicator of whether 
			they could be used to eradicate human sexual activity and 
			infertility.
 Stem-cell derived oocytes could replenish the stocks of women 
			undergoing menopause, or they could be used to allow infertile women 
			to reproduce. The Independent goes so far as to mention an “elixir 
			of youth,” wherein women of any age are full of stem-cell derived 
			oocytes, remaining fertile and youthfully healthy forever.
 
 The scientists argue that using stem cells to grow eggs in lab 
			dishes might one day help preserve cancer patients' fertility.
 
			  
			Today, Woodruff's lab and others freeze 
			pieces of girls' ovaries before they undergo fertility-destroying 
			chemotherapy or radiation. They're studying how to coax the immature 
			eggs inside to mature so they could be used for in vitro 
			fertilization years later when the girls are grown.
 Still, this potential stem cell-based embryo construction still 
			faces some hurdles -- reproductive biologists are applying for a 
			license to the Human Fertilization and Embryology Authority in the 
			UK. But if it’s approved, the eggs could be fertilized this year, 
			according to the Independent.
 
 Stem cells on one hand hold such great promise because they can 
			differentiate into any cell, potentially replacing neurons, islet 
			cells, kidney cells and more.
 
 On the other hand 
			
			serious ethical questions are being raised as to 
			the source and procurement of the stem cells. While some experts in 
			the medical community forecast unlimited potential for fetal tissue 
			technology, others have expressed deep concern as to the limits to 
			the ethical and moral dynamics of the issue.
 
 This research conceivably turns stem cells into an infinite supply 
			of cellular material.
 
			  
			The stem cell eggs may be used to help 
			women conceive a child, but it’s not a huge leap to much more 
			frightening scenarios:  
				
				Stem cells turned into human egg 
				cells, which could be fertilized to grow embryos, which would 
				contain more stem cells, which could in turn be harvested... and 
				so on, as self-contained stem cell factories. 
			
 
			Sources
 
				
			 
			  
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