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Chapter
3 - Cloning Copies of Yourself
THE GENETIC REVOLUTION by Dr
Patrick Dixon-1993/5
Cloning Animals
is Routine Cloning Techniques
What about Cloning Humans?
A Child with Built in
Guarantees What
is so Unnatural about Twins? New
parts For Old Bodies Why
is there a demand for foetal or Clone Transplants? Spare
parts production using new Technology Foetal
transplants for Humans So
What about the Future?
Intro
+ summary Chapter 1
Chapter 2 Chapter
3 Chapter 4
Chapter 5 Chapter
6 Chapter 7
Chapter 8 Chapter
9 References
HOME 40
videos on cloning etc.
AUTHOR NOTE: Huge advances made since this was written
- but the chapter still useful background. For updates press
here: HUMAN
CLONING NEWS
Cloning
animals is routine
A science fiction nightmare has been giving
people the power to create carbon copies or identical twins of themselves.The
technology is already here and so are growing concerns about its
use (60).It is in fact far easier to just copy all the genetic code
of a cell than it is to rewrite it.Even easier than copying is to
get the body to do the copying for you.Since all cells in the body
except red blood cells and germ cells have an identical nucleus
containing all the individuals genes, we have an unlimited source
of complete chromosome set we can use.Even simpler, we could transplant
the entire nucleus from one cell into another using a microfine
glass pipette (see p
for how they are made and used).For many years, we have been
able to clone animals including pigs, sheep, rabbits, cows and chickens.In
fact we seem able to clone just about any mammal we have turned
out energies to cloning.
To produce a clone, we need to be able to get
hold of a complete set of chromosomes and put them into an egg and
see what happens.A frog's egg is easy to do this on because the
nucleus, seen as a black dot, in unfertilised eggs in fresh frogspawn
is so large. As we have seen, the nucleus removed contains only
a half set of chromosomes of course and would not give instructions
to divide until the half is provided by a sperm at fertilisation.
Cloning
techniques (Return
to top)
However, with somewhat greater difficulty,
we can borrow a complete set of chromosomes by taking a whole nucleus
out of a skin cell.The skin nucleus is very small and the procedure
is not easy.If we now inject the skin nucleus into an egg (nuclear
transplantation) then a remarkable transformation happens (70):the
nucleus wakes up to the fact that it is no longer in a determined
cell, and pulls all the volumes of the encyclopedia off the shelf
at once.The nucleus instructs the cell to divide and divide again
repeatedly until the call of the cell starts to influence itself
with each cell touching other cells beginning to fix its role for
the future according to its position.
Interestingly, if you want to save all the
fuss and bother, you can make yourself a cheap cloning system by
separating individual cells off before the big ball develops.If
you do, each single cell taken away will carry on as if it is the
only cell in the world and will go on dividing like a brand new
fertilised egg.This technique is called blastomere separation.
Cloning animals is routine
(Return to top)
Robbing early dividing groups of cells to produce
clones has worked well recently for a variety of animals, especially
cows and sheep (70).Why bother to mate a magnificent prize cow with
a bull which will add extra genes you may not want?Why not just
clone the freak high output high meat yield cow and insert these
egg-like dividing cells into dozens of other cows to act as surrogate
mothers for the clones?Why not indeed?Farmers have felt there are
so many good reasons in favour that cloning is now set to become
a standard breeding technique.
The days of prize bulls or stallions
mating or even donating sperm may be numbered.Any animal can in
theory be cloned this way.Obviously, it takes a lot of skill to
detach healthy dividing cells after fertilisation and insert them
into wombs at the right time and there is a limit to the number
of clones you can make for each fertilised egg (80).We used to be
able to work this method only up to the eight cell stage in mammals
(90), but the limit is growing all the time (95).The reason is that
until the developing ball of cells has properly implanted, each
time the cells divide, they tend to get smaller, with less food
reserves remaining in each.Taking one call out of the ball to form
a new ball is going to result in a smaller second ball of cells
and a weakened embryo which may not be viable.Many of the techniques
being used here - for example invitro fertilisation and embryo replacement,
have been routine in infertility clinics and in farming for a number
of years.
What about
cloning humans? (Return
to top)
So what are the practicalities of cloning humans?I
have met a scientist who claims he has already cloned a human embryo
(100).He found his embryos were dying very early - I suspect because
he was using animals as surrogates and the surrogates were rejecting
human embryos.
So is there a market for human clones?I am
deliberately asking this question laying aside any ethical considerations
for the moment.The question is important here and in every other
level of genetic engineering.If there is a market then I expect
it will happen somewhere.Legislation, as we will see, may not protect
unless it is effective and global.If there is no market it may still
happen probably, but probably on a more experimental scale limited
only by the conscience of the experimenter.
Unfortunately, global experience in war and
peace shows us that such vast cultural and individual differences
exist in world view and personal ethics between individuals and
nations that I regard it as inevitable that somewhere at some time
scientists will pursue what is physically possible.To some extent
such exploration will be for its own sake but no doubt driven by
whatever are their own moral, philosophical, religious or political
persuasions.
The market for human clones could be huge -
especially if they can be frozen (and they can) and only produced
some years after the death of the clone donor.
A
child with built in guarantees (Return
to top)
After all - and I am being deliberately provocative
- if couples can opt for a donated egg and sperm from parents with
known characteristics, to be inserted into the mother's womb, why
not cut out the uncertainties and go for a child with a set of guarantees?
guaranteed intelligence,
guaranteed free from genetic
diseases,
guaranteed abilities in other areas.
You could even have a photograph showing what
the child would look like aged 2 and 6 years old.
The only thing that would not be guaranteed
would be the right environment for the child so that his or her
genetic potential could flourish best.However, we could also describe
a guaranteed environment as one which has tended to produce excellent
results with this set of genes in the past.
Dictators in the past wishing to guarantee
the survival of some aspect of their own personality have only been
able to resort to conceiving a large number of children.Cloning
could be very appealing - possibly "irresistibly" tempting
to a dictator wanting a son and heir worthy of his destiny.For someone
possessed with a sense of his own self, it could indeed be a fascinating
adventure to watch himself grow up again in a different situation.
Let us argue for the sake of exposing the controversy
that it is in fact no different from having a child who seems to
have naturally inherited vastly from one parent:"He is the
spitting image of his father".
What
is so unnatural about twins?
(Return to top)
Here is another thought: would you be able
to spot a clone if you met one?The answer is probably not unless
you are a member of the same family and have access to the photograph
album.It should be pointed out here that identical twins of course
have a totally identical, genetic code and are clones of each other.
Triplets are also natural clones.In our example
of adult cloning, the only thing that makes it unnatural is that
the identical embryos are not born at the same time but possibly
fifteen, twenty or even fifty years apart.The other difference is
that they would be born with different parents - or apparently so.
It could be argued that since environment does
have such a huge influence on development, the only identicalness
would be in appearance at each stage compared to old photographs
of the clone donor.In fact, due to age differences, donor and clone
will probably never even look identical.Even if they are similar
in age and look and sound the same one might ask what is so unnatural
anyway about twins?Natural clones exist therefore in virtually every
family tree.
Please understand that I am not arguing myself
from a point of personal conviction, but unless we understand the
ways these issues are likely to be presented then we will be wholly
unprepared to meet the issues of tomorrow's world - a worl approaching
faster than we ever realised.Genetic engineers are swift to point
out technical difficulties but in fact they are no different from
the difficulties of cloning any other mammal.However the ethical
difficulties are vast.
New
Parts for Old Bodies (Return
to top)
These is another more hideous (yet also potentially
lifesaving) aspect of cloning: using a clone to manufacture a new
organ.Earlier we saw that cells in an embryo quickly sense their
position in the body and become more and more specialised.In theory
it should be possible to take a semi-specialised cell developed
from a fertilised egg and treat it in the laboratory so that it
reacts to form, say, a perfect replacement kidney.A simpler approach
already being used in medicine is to collect aborted foetuses in
a bucket in an operating theatre and then surgically remove various
organs and tissues for transplanting into people who need them.Needless
to say the practice, although common, has not been widely publicised.
Why
is there a demand for foetal or clone transplants?
(Return to top)
Spare part surgery only works if spares are
available, and if spare parts work after replacement.Unfortunately
for many who die each year of kidney, heart or other organ failure,
not only are spares often not available but they also often fail
to work.
Spares are often unavailable because
tissues or organs need ideally to be moved instantaneously from
one living body into another.The nearest we get to this is the living
donor: a parent who donates a kidney to a child for example.In these
cases, two surgical teams operate at the same time on donor and
recipient in adjacent operating theatres.
In many cases, where an organ could be donated,
death has occurred with loss of circulation and accumulation of
poisonous substances before tissues can be removed.In the case of
donated corneas or skin grafts the timing is not critical.Corneas
survive body death for a number of hours.
Their need of food and oxygen is low and transplants
are relatively straightforward.Kidneys however work extremely hard
at all times in the body, purifying the blood.Kidney cells are damaged
permanently in half an hour unless the kidney is rapidly chilled
after removal by storage in an ice box.Kidney donors tend therefore
to be accident victims where massive brain destruction has occurred,
the person is effectively deceased but the heart, lungs and kidneys
are all still functioning, with machines artificially maintaining
the body in the twilight zone between life and full death.Kidney
donation is therefore accompanied by a temptation to turn off a
life-support machine.The numbers of kidneys available fell dramatically
recently after a series of television programmes which caused great
public uncertainties about whether or not such accident victims
were truly dead.Fears that pressures to transplant could over-ride
a small chance of recovery led to many relatives refusing to give
permission and to large numbers of people tearing up their kidney
donor cards.There is still an acute shortage.
However, even if sufficient organs available
there is often a further major limitation of spare part surgery:
compatibility of tissues between donor and recipient.
As we have seen, each person's set of genes
is a quite unique combination of tens of thousands of individual
messages.Just as each person's facial features are different, so
also are the surface features of each cell in the body.The area
where we are most familiar with this is that of blood group: there
are several main blood groupings, each of which is incompatible
with the others.For this reason blood type of both donor and recipient
are always checked before transfusion.However, even if you are
the same blood group as me, and were to donate to me a kidney, my
body would almost certainly regard it as a foreign germ and try
to destroy it.Very occasionally, you find two people whose cell
features are so similar that a transplant would be accepted well.Finding
these matches between all organ donors and people needing them is
therefore extremely complicated and explains why organs are often
flown great distances to find the person with the best "match".It
also explains why commercial pressures have resulted in buying and
selling kidneys, and in paying non-relatives to donate them.Genetic
engineering is contributing to our understanding of these cell differences
and how to overcome them (110).
Badly matching organs usually fail rapidly
although some help can be given by giving high doses of steroid
and other treatments to try and persuade the body's defences from
attacking the transplant so vigorously.
So spare parts are often not available and
often do not work as well as we would like after a transplantation.Having
said this, we are seeing great improvements with more sophisticated
treatment after transplantation and a great many alive today owe
their survival to organ donation.The two which perhaps do best are
kidneys where kidney failure itself poisons the body's defences
so transplant rejection is often less and cornea transplants where
the body's defences seem to tolerate new eye coatings very well.
Spare
part production using new technology (Return
to top)
Having decided there could be a big market
in self-grown replacement organs, how would it be done?
First we have to look at what has already been
carried out in animals or using animals.In 1984 there was a huge
outcry when a surgeon in Southern California removed the beating
heart from a baboon and transplanted it into a baby known as "Baby
Fae".For reason which are obvious from what we have just seen,
the heart was rejected and the baby died.However we are now seeing
similar experiments in reverse: organs removed from late human foetuses
that have just been aborted, and inserted into animals.
These experiments are being carried out in
Palo Alto Mexico by a company called Systemix backed by a $10 million
investment (120)They are using mice bred without any natural immune
system to fight either infection or transplants from humans.They
are kept in a strictly germ free environment.Then they receive
human tissue - for example thymus, lymph node or liver cells.With
these transplants the mouse develops a human style immune system.The
mouse can then be infected with the AIDS virus (HIV) or with other
viruses which also fail to grow well other than in humans.The mice
can then be used to test potentially hazardous new treatments.These
humanised mice are big business but may be flawed because mice still
do not produce disease like we do.
Incidentally, there is another more serious
problem: trying to infect mice with HIV could lead to a mutation
producing an even more dangerous version of HIV.This could happen
if mouse viruses combined in some way with HIV.It has even been
suggested by some scientists that such inter-species virus experiments
could conceivably have led to the emergence of HIV in the first
place (130).Although the evidence appears to be stacked against
this alarming suggestion, the fact that it can even be made shows
some of the problems that can emerge.As we will see later on, experimental
viruses have combined unexpectedly with each other in animals in
the past, becoming more dangerous as the new strain emerged (135).
Foetal
transplants for humans (Return
to top)
We can reverse this method to treat humans:
how about taking organs or tissue from animal foetuses and transferring
them into humans?Such transplants will be as surely rejected as
the monkey heart in the earlier example.
But what about removing tissue from an aborted human foetus
and using that instead?Such an idea is abhorrent to me and to most
of the population but is it being done?
For several years now tissue from aborted foetuses
has been used to treat patients with "severe combined immunodeficiency
disease" (140).Unlike AIDS this is an inherited condition affecting
all the immune system rather than just one part.The tissues transplanted
are pieces of liver and parts of the bone marrow.In another related
disease called the Di George syndrome, the tissue transplanted is
from the Thymus gland (140).Other types of immunodeficiency, disorders
of red blood cell production and disorders of metabolism can also
be treated in this way.
Interestingly, although the foetal tissue is
completely incompatible and would normally have been rejected -
no matching takes place between foetal donor and recipient - these
transplants seem to work (140).Other uses are likely to be made
of foetal transplants in the future.Over the last ten years a number
of experiments have been carried out in animals using foetal tissue
transplants to cure brain damage.Such experiments are an extension
of nerve tissue transplants that have been studied for around 100
years (145).If these latest experiments prove successful then we
can expect to see foetal brain or spinal cord transplants in humans.The
hope would be to try and overcome a big problem in damaged human
brains. Unlike the situation in the developing embryo, once a baby
is born the nerve cells seem to stop dividing and their response
to injury is unlike other parts of the body.By using primitive brain
cells we might be able to allow a certain amount of repair of the
brain to take place (145).
So what
about the future? (Return
to top)
Let's take the case of a dying prize winning
musician.He needs a kidney and none is available.He gives a blood
sample and is told to come back in about eight to ten months' time
for a transplant.He pays a very large sum for the privilege.The
transplant is entirely successful.The only complication is that
it takes quite a while to get going fully.
Without realising it, he has just paid a private
clinic for a cloned kidney.A nucleus was taken from a white blood
cell in the sample he gave, and it was then inserted into a human
egg, which in turn was implanted into a surrogate mother's womb.After
nine months, a cloned baby was removed by Caesarian section.Shortly
after birth one kidney was removed and inserted into the professor.The
baby was adopted 24 hours later by doting new parents believing
that the child had been born naturally but with a defective kidney
that had now been removed.
Fact or fiction?As we have seen the cloning
technology is all there.The demand is certainly there.For the present
there are two blocks: the first is obtaining a surrogate mother.However
that is becoming easier in the West if the right story is told and
is difficult to prevent commercially in the two-thirds world.A mother
could be offered the equivalent of ten years wages (?10,000) by
an agent.The second larger block is that a newborn baby kidney is
much too small and immature to help a full-grown adult much.However,
other tissues might do rather better, in particular bone marrow
and other rapidly dividing organs such as skin to cover grossly
disfiguring burns for example.
Perhaps having at least formed a complete baby
kidney we will in the future be able to accelerate its growth in
the laboratory using new growth hormones while connecting it to
an artificial blood supply.
The skin example is an interesting one because
we are able in this case to clone skin directly from skin cells
- without having to create a whole new human being.Skin cells can
be stimulated to grow and divide.They can be tricked into thinking
that they are on the edge of the wound.In the laboratory large sheets
of skin can be grown quite rapidly from just a few sample pieces
of skin.These can then be returned to the donor.We are also able
to clone cells successfully from bone marrow as a routine part of
medical treatment in those with leukaemia.
AUTHOR's
NOTE: PRESS
HERE FOR LATEST NEWS ON THESE ISSUES
Cloning Animals
is Routine Cloning Techniques
What about Cloning Humans?
A Child with Built in
Guarantees What
is so Unnatural about Twins? New
parts For Old Bodies Why
is there a demand for foetal or Clone Transplants? Spare
parts production using new Technology Foetal
transplants for Humans So
What about the Future?
Intro
+ summary Chapter 1
Chapter 2 Chapter
3 Chapter 4
Chapter 5 Chapter
6 Chapter 7
Chapter 8 Chapter
9 References
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