A new experiment defies nature and might one day let two males have babies with each other.
Andrew Griffin
A new experiment defies nature and might one day let two males have babies with each other. The new study overthrows the idea that it is only possible to produce children using an egg, and fertilising it with sperm. Instead, the research suggests that it might be possible to conceive children using skin cells.
In a new experiment, scientists have shown that it would be possible to conceive of mice using other kinds of cells. The study showed that it was possible to produce healthy offspring while bypassing the normal route of fertilising an egg with sperm. Thus, it would be possible to fuse sperm with ordinary cells like skin or other tissue, without using cloning, to produce babies.
As such, it could lead the way to human reproduction that completely cuts the female part of the process.
Scientists have called such a scenario "speculative and fanciful", but haven't ruled it out.
If that happened, it would allow gay men to have children with each other. And it would allow a man to fertilise his own cells with his own sperm, producing offspring that would use only his genes and those inherited from his parents.
But the finding also suggests that women whose fertility has been wiped out by cancer drugs or other treatments can still have their own children, using another of their cells. At the moment, people in that situation can only have children of their own if their eggs were frozen before treatment.
And the same treatment could allow for the preservation of endangered species, since it allows scientists to get around the often complicated and difficult process of collecting eggs from those that they wish to help breed. Instead, they could just use sperm and somatic cells.
"Our work challenges the dogma, held since early embryologists first observed mammalian eggs around 1827 and observed fertilisation 50 years later, that only an egg cell fertilised with a sperm cell can result in live mammalian birth," said lead scientist Tony Perry, a molecular embryologist from the University of Bath.
But Perry also made it clear the tests on mice only prove that the technique would work in principle.
The experiment used "parthenogenote" mouse embryos - all-female embryos made without any sperm, created by tricking an egg into developing as if it was fertilised. Usually, those embryos die after a few days because they are not properly programmed. But in the new studies, scientists found that they could inject them with sperm and transform them into normal embryos.
The study produced 30 mouse pups with a success rate of 24%.
That finding matters because parthenogenotes are similar to other ordinary cells, like skin cells. Both are mitotic, and if an offspring can be produced from one then it should be possible to create them from the other.
"The practical applications of this as the technology stands at the moment are not very broad. These embryos are mitotic cells - mitotic cells are the type of cell that almost every dividing cell in your body is. And therefore potentially one day we might be able to extend what we've shown in these mitotic cells to other mitotic cells," Perry said. (The independent)
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