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Stem Cell Research and Human Cloning

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Title: Stem Cell Research and Human Cloning


1
Stem Cell Researchand Human Cloning
  • Ray Campbell
  • Director, Queensland Bioethics Centre

2
The Big Picture
  • Human nature itself lies on the operating table,
    ready for alteration, for eugenic and
    neuropsychic enhancement, for wholesale
    redesign. In leading laboratories, academic and
    industrial, new creators are confidently amassing
    their powers and quietly honing their skills,
    while on the street their evangelists are
    zealously prophesying a posthuman future. For
    anyone who cares about preserving our humanity,
    the time has come to pay attention. (Leon Kass,
    Life, Liberty and the Defense of Dignity)

3
Some Questions
  • What does it mean to treat nascent human life as
    raw material to be exploited as a mere natural
    resource?
  • What does it mean to blur the lines between
    procreation and manufacture?
  • What are the likely future possibilities emerging
    from out current decisions?
  • Can we control where this project is taking us,
    so as to reap the benefits without losing our
    humanity? If so, how? (Leon Kass)

4
Stem cells
  • A generic cell which can a) continue to
    proliferate and b) give rise to specialised cells
  • Totipotent stem cells can give rise to every
    cell in the human body -- the single cell zygote
    and the very early embryo
  • Pluripotent can give rise to many different
    specialised cells
  • Multipotent generates cells for a particular
    type of tissue
  • Unipotent able to form only one differentiated
    type

Differentiation
5
Kinds of stem cells
  • Adult stem cells (post natal)
  • Able to produce exact copies of themselves and
    differentiated daughter cells
  • Said to be multipotent
  • More pliable than first believed -- possibility
    of transdifferentiation -- pluripotent
  • Difficult to find, but more being identified
  • www.stemcellreseach.org

6
More recent developments with adult stem cells
  • Baby teeth as source of stem cells
  • Use of olfactory tissue
  • Olfactory neurons
  • Olfactory stem cells
  • Olfactory ensheathing cells producing
    insulating myelin sheaths
  • Therapies and clinical trials using them already
    exist cancers, autoimmune disease, stroke,
    heart attack, skin, bone and cartilage
    deformities, spinal injury(?)

7
Kinds of stem cells
  • Foetal stem cells
  • Taken from foetal tissue
  • Make up the bulk of the tissue
  • Thought to be capable of generating whole organs
  • Generally not rejected to the same extent as
    post-natal tissue
  • Obtained from aborted or miscarried foetuses.

8
Kinds of stem cells
  • Umbilical cord blood and placenta tissue stem
    cells
  • Good source of stem cells particularly for bone
    marrow
  • Less chance of rejection
  • Cord blood banks
  • To date, limited application

9
Kinds of stem cells
  • Embryonic stem cells
  • Cells which have not yet differentiated --
    pluripotent
  • Hailed as possible source for many cures -- but
    none to date
  • Obtained by destroying an embryo

10
Developing embryo
11
Obtaining embryonic stem cells
12
From embryonic cell to specialised cell
13
Obtaining embryonic stem cells
  • from existing spare embryos from IVF process
    destroys the embryo
  • through cloning and then destroying the embryo

14
What is a clone?
  • "one or a group of genetically identical cells,
    organisms, or plants derived by vegetative
    reproduction from a single parent." Dorland's
    Illustrated Medical Dictionary (29th edition)
  • "member of group of organisms produced asexually
    from one individual, The Australian Pocket
    Oxford Dictionary

15
Three types of human cloning
  • Replicating genetic cellular material e.g. DNA
    fragments, particular cells

16
Three types of human cloning
  • Splitting of human embryo -- blastomere separation

17
Three types of human cloning
  • Somatic cell nuclear transfer

18
Dolly
  • February, 1997, the Roslin Institute, Scotland

19
Human Cloning Possibilities
  • Human somatic cell transfer to an enucleated
    human ovum (actually fusion of a human somatic
    cell with an enucleated human ovum)
  • Human somatic cell nuclear transfer to an
    enucleated human embryo
  • Human somatic cell transfer to an enucleated
    animal ovum
  • Human somatic cell nuclear transfer to an
    enucleated animal embryo
  • Transfer of chromosomes from more than one human
    individual to a human or animal enucleated ovum
    or embryo
  • Fertilisation of a human ovum by chromosomes
    from a human somatic cell
  • Fusion of ova from two different women or from
    the same woman
  • Parthenogenesis

20
When is a clone a clone?
  • Most of Dollys mitochondria (99.5) came from
    the egg 37 genes
  • In humans this would mean 1 of DNA would not be
    the same as the donor
  • Nuclear genetic identity, not total

21
Developmental problems with clones
  • Inefficiency -- only 2 to 4 of mammalian clones
    are long term survivors
  • Poor Imprinting -- molecular mechanism through
    which genes inside sperm and egg cells are turned
    on or off in preparation for early embryonic and
    fetal development
  • Need for a large number of eggs hence some
    advocate the use of animal eggs for human cloning

22
Reproductive cloning and therapeutic cloning
  • Reproductive cloning -- cloning for the sake of
    bringing a genetically identical person to birth
  • Therapeutic cloning -- supposedly for some
    therapeutic purpose
  • In what sense is this a valid distinction? -- a
    distinction based upon further purposes of the
    actual cloning

23
Reproductive cloning and therapeutic cloning
  • Universal Declaration on the Human Genome and
    Human Rights, 1997 states that practices such as
    reproductive cloning of human beings shall not
    be permitted.
  • The Declaration makes no reference to
    therapeutic cloning
  • The relevant distinction was between cloning
    human beings and cloning parts.

24
Reproductive cloning and therapeutic cloning
  • A false distinction
  • All human cloning is embryo cloning
  • All human cloning is experimental
  • A misuse of the term therapeutic
  • never used for research destructive of the
    subject
  • Recent attempts to avoid use of word cloning by
    referring to somatic cell nuclear transfer
    (SCNT)
  • SCNT is cloning!!

25
The Issues
  • The Current Legislation
  • Research Involving Embryos Act and Prohibition
    of Human Cloning Act 2002

26
Purpose of the Acts
  • REAto address concerns, including ethical
    concerns, about scientific developments in
    relation to human reproduction and the
    utilisation of human embryos by regulating
    activities that involve the use of certain human
    embryos created by assisted reproductive
    technology.
  • Notice it is use of human embryos not respect
    for or care of.

27
Purposes of Acts
  • PHCA to address concerns, including ethical
    concerns, about scientific developments in
    relation to human reproduction and the
    utilisation of human embryos by prohibiting
    certain practices.

28
The Act and embryonic stem cells
  • Nowhere in the Act is there mention of embryonic
    stem cells. The reference is in the explanatory
    memorandum
  • The Act permits destructive research on human
    embryos providing certain conditions are met.
    Nowhere is this research limited to the
    harvesting of stem cells.
  • The majority of approvals already granted are not
    for obtaining stem cells

29
Current Situation
  • Lockhart Review and Report and Patterson Bill
  • While claiming that embryos from eggs and sperm
    should only be created for reproductive purposes,
    there is no mechanism to ensure this
  • Want to redefine the embryo
  • Want to allow cloning for research purposes
  • Would permit many of the practices currently
    forbidden

30
Senate Inquiry
  • Senate Inquiry of the Community Affairs
    Legislation Committee into the Provisions of the
    Research Involving Human Embryos and Prohibition
    of Human Cloning Bill 2002

31
Community Affairs Legislation Committee Chairs
Report
  • The heart of the ethical debate before the
    Committee is the question of whether or not the
    embryo enjoys the same moral status as an adult
    or child, and hence whether it is an open
    question that it may be morally acceptable to
    destroy a human embryo for the sake of the
    benefit of others. (3.11) (References in
    brackets are to the Chairs Report)

32
The Question
  • Who is to count as a member of the human family?
  • The new legislation seeks to put a different
    value on a cloned embryo than an embryo created
    by fertilisation
  • It is still illegal to create an embryo by
    fertilisation for anything other than
    reproductive purposes.

33
Embryos with different status
  • A wanted embryo (and/or foetus) in the womb
  • An unwanted embryo (and/or foetus) in the womb
  • A wanted, unfrozen embryo outside the womb
  • An unwanted, unfrozen embryo outside the womb
  • A wanted frozen embryo
  • An unwanted frozen embryo
  • A cloned embryo

34
Biologically and ontologically the same
  • From the moment that the first cell is formed, a
    human embryo is an individual organism oriented
    to development to human adulthood, normally
    requiring only nutrition and a favourable
    environment for that development to occur, and
    whose inherited nature is formed by the human
    genome which carries the inherent radical
    capacity for rationality that is distinctive of
    human beings. (Senate Report, Comments by
    Senator Harradine, 1.13, p.185)

35
The status of the embryoThe status of the
question
  • It is reasonable to say that more false
    information, misrepresentations, half-truths and
    outright lies concerning human embryology have
    been stated since Roe v Wade than at any previous
    time in history, including ancient times. (C.
    Ward Kisher, The Media and Human Embryology
    Linacre Quarterly, May, 1998, p.34)

36
Moral significance of being human
  • "For us Christians, the human person is the apex
    of everything created. Their great dignity is
    like a reflection of the divine image, an
    indelible imprint on their very being, and as
    such ranks above all other things, so that human
    beings can never be considered mere instruments
    to be used for the benefit of others.

37
Moral significance of being human
  • Unfortunately, modern technological and political
    mentality sometimes seems to ignore this,
    forgetting the values and the rights of the human
    spirit. Since human beings are persons and the
    subjects of any action, there is no human reason
    or pretext in the scientific, social, political
    or economic order which could ever justify a
    change in their function or status from subjects
    to objects." (Pontifical Commission on Justice
    and Peace, The Church and Human Rights, 1974).

38
Moral foundations
  • Every human person to be valued of and for
    themselves not as a means to another end
  • Wisdom to use knowledge in a way respectful of
    the good of every human person
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