Researchers get stem cells from cloned monkeys

Wed Nov 14, 2007 9:43pm EST
 
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By Maggie Fox, Health and Science Editor

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. researchers have cloned monkeys and used the resulting embryos to get embryonic stem cells, an important step towards being able to do the same thing in humans, they reported on Wednesday.

Shoukhrat Mitalipov and colleagues at Oregon Health & Science University said they used skin cells from monkeys to create cloned embryos, and then extracted embryonic stem cells from these days-old embryos.

This had only been done in mice before, they reported in the journal Nature. Mitalipov had given sketchy details of his work at a conference in Australia in June, but the work has now been independently verified by another team of experts.

They said their work shows it is possible, in principle, to clone humans and get stem cells from the embryos. "The efficiency is still low but I am quite sure that it will work in humans," Mitalipov told reporters in a telephone briefing.

Embryonic stem cells are the source of every cell, tissue and organ in the body. Scientists study them to understand the biology of disease and want to use them to transform medicine.

The idea would be to take a small piece of skin from a patient and grow tissue or even organ transplants perfectly matched to the patient.

But their use is controversial, with opponents saying it is wrong to use a human embryo in this way. President George W. Bush has repeatedly blocked legislation that would expand federal funding of such research.

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