For First Time, Scientists Create Mice with Cells from Two Males

2023-03-22

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  • For the first time, scientists have created baby mice with two fathers.
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  • They did this by turning mouse stem cells into female cells in a lab.
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  • Stem cells are cells early in their development that can develop into any other kind of cell.
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  • The result raises the distant possibility of doing the same for people.
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  • But experts say very few mouse embryos were born alive.
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  • They add that no one knows if the same method would work in human stem cells.
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  • Diana Laird is a stem cell and reproductive expert at the University of California, San Francisco.
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  • She was not involved with the research.
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  • She said the researchers developed a very smart method for changing male stem cells to female stem cells.
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  • She added, "It's an important step in both stem cell and reproductive biology."
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  • Scientists described their work in a study published last week in the journal Nature.
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  • First, the researchers took skin cells from the tails of male mice and changed them into a kind of stem cell called "induced pluripotent stem cells."
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  • These cells can develop into many different kinds of cells or tissues.
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  • Then, they turned the male mouse stem cells into female cells and produced functional egg cells.
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  • They did this through a process that involved growing the stem cells and treating them with a drug.
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  • Finally, they fertilized those eggs and placed the embryos into female mice.
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  • About one percent of the embryos - 7 out of 630 - grew into live baby mice.
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  • Katsuhiko Hayashi of Kyushu University and Osaka University in Japan led the research.
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  • He spoke with fellow scientists at the Third International Summit on Human Genome Editing earlier this month.
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  • He said the baby mice appear to grow normally and were able to become parents themselves in the usual way.
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  • Jonathan Bayerl works with Laird.
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  • The two scientists said in an article published alongside the Nature study that the work "opens up new avenues in reproductive biology and fertility research" for animals and people.
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  • In the future, for example, it might be possible to reproduce endangered animals from a single male.
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  • But they also raised several possible problems.
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  • The largest one is that the method is extremely inefficient.
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  • They said it is unclear why such a small number of the embryos placed into the female mice survived.
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  • The reasons could be technical or biological.
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  • They also said it is too early to know if the method would work in human stem cells at all.
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  • Laird added that scientists need to be careful of the mutations and mistakes that may be introduced in the method before using stem cells to make eggs.
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  • The research is the latest to test new ways to create mouse embryos in the lab.
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  • Last summer, scientists in California and Israel created mouse embryos from stem cells without the beginning cells needed for reproduction or uterus.
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  • Those embryos followed the development of natural mouse embryos up to eight and a half days after fertilization.
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  • Scientists said the success could be used in creating human embryos for research in the future.
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  • I'm Gregory Stachel.