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Chinese scientists genetically modify human embryos

Rumours of germline modification prove true — and look set to reignite an ethical debate.

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Dr. Yorgos Nikas/SPL

Human embryos are at the centre of a debate over the ethics of gene editing.

In a world first, Chinese scientists have reported editing the genomes of human embryos. The results are published1 in the online journal Protein & Cell and confirm widespread rumours that such experiments had been conducted — rumours that sparked a high-profile debate last month2, 3 about the ethical implications of such work.

In the paper, researchers led by Junjiu Huang, a gene-function researcher at Sun Yat-sen University in Guangzhou, tried to head off such concerns by using 'non-viable' embryos, which cannot result in a live birth, that were obtained from local fertility clinics. The team attempted to modify the gene responsible for β-thalassaemia, a potentially fatal blood disorder, using a gene-editing technique known as CRISPR/Cas9. The researchers say that their results reveal serious obstacles to using the method in medical applications.

"I believe this is the first report of CRISPR/Cas9 applied to human pre-implantation embryos and as such the study is a landmark, as well as a cautionary tale," says George Daley, a stem-cell biologist at Harvard Medical School in Boston, Massachusetts. "Their study should be a stern warning to any practitioner who thinks the technology is ready for testing to eradicate disease genes."

Some say that gene editing in embryos could have a bright future because it could eradicate devastating genetic diseases before a baby is born. Others say that such work crosses an ethical line: researchers warned in Nature2 in March that because the genetic changes to embryos, known as germline modification, are heritable, they could have an unpredictable effect on future generations. Researchers have also expressed concerns that any gene-editing research on human embryos could be a slippery slope towards unsafe or unethical uses of the technique.

The paper by Huang's team looks set to reignite the debate on human-embryo editing — and there are reports that other groups in China are also experimenting on human embryos.

Problematic gene

The technique used by Huang’s team involves injecting embryos with the enzyme complex CRISPR/Cas9, which binds and splices DNA at specific locations. The complex can be programmed to target a problematic gene, which is then replaced or repaired by another molecule introduced at the same time. The system is well studied in human adult cells and in animal embryos. But there had been no published reports of its use in human embryos.

Huang and his colleagues set out to see if the procedure could replace a gene in a single-cell fertilized human embryo; in principle, all cells produced as the embryo developed would then have the repaired gene. The embryos they obtained from the fertility clinics had been created for use in in vitro fertilization but had an extra set of chromosomes, following fertilization by two sperm. This prevents the embryos from resulting in a live birth, though they do undergo the first stages of development.

Huang’s group studied the ability of the CRISPR/Cas9 system to edit the gene called HBB, which encodes the human β-globin protein. Mutations in the gene are responsible for β-thalassaemia.

Serious obstacles

The team injected 86 embryos and then waited 48 hours, enough time for the CRISPR/Cas9 system and the molecules that replace the missing DNA to act — and for the embryos to grow to about eight cells each. Of the 71 embryos that survived, 54 were genetically tested. This revealed that just 28 were successfully spliced, and that only a fraction of those contained the replacement genetic material. “If you want to do it in normal embryos, you need to be close to 100%,” Huang says. “That’s why we stopped. We still think it’s too immature.”

His team also found a surprising number of ‘off-target’ mutations assumed to be introduced by the CRISPR/Cas9 complex acting on other parts of the genome. This effect is one of the main safety concerns surrounding germline gene editing because these unintended mutations could be harmful. The rates of such mutations were much higher than those observed in gene-editing studies of mouse embryos or human adult cells. And Huang notes that his team likely only detected a subset of the unintended mutations because their study looked only at a portion of the genome, known as the exome. “If we did the whole genome sequence, we would get many more,” he says.

Ethical questions

Huang says that the paper was rejected by Nature and Science, in part because of ethical objections; both journals declined to comment on the claim. (Nature’s news team is editorially independent of its research editorial team.)

He adds that critics of the paper have noted that the low efficiencies and high number of off-target mutations could be specific to the abnormal embryos used in the study. Huang acknowledges the critique, but because there are no examples of gene editing in normal embryos he says that there is no way to know if the technique operates differently in them.

Still, he maintains that the embryos allow for a more meaningful model — and one closer to a normal human embryo — than an animal model or one using adult human cells. “We wanted to show our data to the world so people know what really happened with this model, rather than just talking about what would happen without data,” he says.

But Edward Lanphier, one of the scientists who sounded the warning in Nature last month, says: "It underlines what we said before: we need to pause this research and make sure we have a broad based discussion about which direction we’re going here." Lanphier is president of Sangamo BioSciences in Richmond, California, which applies gene-editing techniques to adult human cells.

Huang now plans to work out how to decrease the number of off-target mutations using adult human cells or animal models. He is considering different strategies — tweaking the enzymes to guide them more precisely to the desired spot, introducing the enzymes in a different format that could help to regulate their lifespans and thus allow them to be shut down before mutations accumulate, or varying the concentrations of the introduced enzymes and repair molecules. He says that using other gene-editing techniques might also help. CRISPR/Cas9 is relatively efficient and easy to use, but another system called TALEN is known to cause fewer unintended mutations.

The debate over human embryo editing is sure to continue for some time, however. CRISPR/Cas9 is known for its ease of use and Lanphier fears that more scientists will now start to work towards improving on Huang's paper. “The ubiquitous access to and simplicity of creating CRISPRs," he says, "creates opportunities for scientists in any part of the world to do any kind of experiments they want.”

A Chinese source familiar with developments in the field said that at least four groups in China are pursuing gene editing in human embryos.

Journal name:
Nature
DOI:
doi:10.1038/nature.2015.17378

References

  1. Liang, P. et al. Protein Cell http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s13238-015-0153-5 (2015).

  2. Lanphier, E. et al. Nature 519, 410411 (2015).

  3. Baltimore, D. et al. Science 348, 3638 (2015).

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  1. Avatar for Laurence Parry
    Laurence Parry
    I trust that China's scientists will now turn to the important task of uplifting animals; a goal free of any ethical concerns. Perhaps once we have intelligent wolf-people, adding fuzzy ears and a tail to your child will seem like less of a concern.
  2. Avatar for Upinder Fotadar
    Upinder Fotadar
    Also scientifically this work is more of a technical job rather than a creative one since the CRISPR/Cas9 technique is in place for some time now. While most scientists from the democratic world will surely tread this research path with a degree of caution, however, evidently the totalitarian state of China will certainly continue to take the Frankenstein approach. Dr. Upinder Fotadar
  3. Avatar for Giovanna Serenelli
    Giovanna Serenelli
    I have already expressed my opinion a few days ago. Simply: the ethics is ethics whatever the topic we are discussing. Comment by Lettuce Prey might be my own brief commentary.
  4. Avatar for Martin Vale
    Martin Vale
    Eliminate the inheritance of delayed expression genes? Why not? There are diseases like early onset Alzheimers or Huntington's Disease that do not appear until after the person has already had children. Why not eliminated the gene from an embryo so that the disease is not perpetuated?
  5. Avatar for julie beddome
    julie beddome
    If our psychology doesn't keep pace with our technology, we're doomed. At this point in our development we should not be doing anything that does harm to any living thing. This science has ethical implications because all we see around us is greed, war and hate. Until we get those things in order, advancing scientifically to this degree is a no-win situation. We're putting the cart before the horse...
  6. Avatar for Upinder Fotadar
    Upinder Fotadar
    Also scientifically this work is more of a technical job rather than a creative one since the CRISPR/Cas9 technique is in place for some time now. While most scientists from the democratic world will surely tread this research path with a degree caution, however, evidently the totalitarian state of China will certainly continue to take the Frankenstein approach. Dr. Upinder Fotadar
  7. Avatar for Dr. Ned Meyers
    Dr. Ned Meyers
    330 million abortions since 1971 in China. That's 1,500 per hour with the majority of them girls. It is a fallacy to believe that China is engaged in these studies for the betterment of mankind. These lopsided abortion stats and selective birth policies show that they are not interested in the welfare of people - even their own citizens. These studies are about prominence, power and money.
  8. Avatar for Dick Chilian
    Dick Chilian
    I think it is a great step forward. Thwarting and circumventing genetically inherited diseases before they can actually occur is a wonderful idea. It's barely beginning. It's barely past hypothetical. Calm down.
  9. Avatar for Guest
    Guest
    Sounds bad on embryo gene modification.
  10. Avatar for Guest
    Guest
    Sounds bad
  11. Avatar for Jordan Stumbo
    Jordan Stumbo
    I find it interesting that there are "ethical objections" to manipulating human embryos but not to annihilating them completely.
  12. Avatar for Flying Tiger
    Flying Tiger
    Quick quick do a hashtag, effeminate betas! Meanwhile the scientists responsible say, 'look at all the fucks I give'.
  13. Avatar for K shadowflow
    K shadowflow
    Calm down guys, go and review that article and then come back to give your opinion..
  14. Avatar for Xin Li
    Xin Li
    Is this part of the process that homo sapien will transform ourselves to another form of intelligence to fight with the increasingly intelligent Robotic lifeform? Cannot wait to see the future...
  15. Avatar for Paul Williams
    Paul Williams
    I find it interesting that the only thing not commented on is the fact that the whole human genome came into being by accident but man cannot find a way to manipulate it in a good way. Everything below addresses all the flaws that can occur with manipulation. It seems that everything science tries to do with the genome creates something flawed. Kind of makes you have to consider that there may have been a consciousness behind its construction.
  16. Avatar for Upinder Fotadar
    Upinder Fotadar
    Communist China certainly does not belong to the community of most 21st century nations. Thus this research done is only a minor ethical violation as far as the Chinese are concerned. It is, hence, hoped that the West rather than rewarding China will isolate her in order to nudge the latter away from this callous approach. I hope this is true, since it is surely overdue: http://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-china-30324440 Dr. Upinder Fotadar
  17. Avatar for Tru Th
    Tru Th
    Is that the proud family of white Euro-American nations? The ones that just can't stop bombing and killing middle easterners?
  18. Avatar for howard feinski
    howard feinski
    Since contemporary (legal) science does not agree, it is obviously the right moment to bring in Dr. Evil! Yahha hah ha heh-h-h-h!
  19. Avatar for Kahn Sighn
    Kahn Sighn
    Preparing for the Eugenics Wars.
  20. Avatar for Tru Th
    Tru Th
    I'm certain America will remain #1, especially in the mutilation of all lifeforms
  21. Avatar for Gordon Cash
    Show parent comment
    Gordon Cash
    Mr. Bashinski, I was going to write a post of my own about this article, but you pretty much made all the points I was going to make. That said, I do have to (reluctantly) agree with Mr. Velasco below that there isn't even a rough consensus that embryos aren't people. Among scientists, perhaps, but not in the general population. Of course, as he also ironically points out, the fact that everybody believes something is right doesn't make it right, so if everybody believed a glob of undifferentiated cells was the moral equivalent of a walking, talking, thinking, feeling human being, it would still be nonsense.
  22. Avatar for John Robin
    John Robin
    "...it would still be nonsense"? Based on what objective standard do you determine that? I don't see that the "personhood" of an embryo (or any living human being for that matter) is within the competence of science to determine, so I don't consider meaningful or possible any truly scientific concensus on this question. The question is vitally important for ethical reasons, but it's not going to be answered by hypothesis, testing, and peer review of empirical results. Since such a question is outside the scope of science, all science can honestly claim in its regard is: "Is an human embryo a human person? We don't know. We can neither confirm nor deny." To which the competent ethicist must respond, "Then, if we err, we must err on the side of caution."
  23. Avatar for John Bashinski
    John Bashinski
    In the sense you demand, science can neither confirm nor deny that the keyboard I'm typing on is a human person. However, the "competent ethicist" isn't required to stop there. Science can tell you that an embryo is no more likely than my keyboard to be conscious, to have any preference about what happens to it, or to experience anything in any way. Science can tell you that that embryo has not developed the machinery to have a personality, or anything that could be called a "mind" under any reasonable definition. Science can tell you that that embryo has way, way less capacity for sensation or information processing than a huge number of animals that people routinely kill and eat. Or than some plants, for that matter. And you, as a "competent ethicist", can feed those facts into whatever ethical rule you may have about what is or is not a human person. But if the rule you choose to apply makes that completely mindless, sensationless embryo a person, then I am going to laugh at your rule, because such a rule is pretty obviously silly. And, if you go there, you'd be better be careful not to come up with a rule that also makes people out of a bunch of other things that you'd rather NOT call people, because you are at serious risk of doing so. As for your precautionary approach, which side exactly is the "side of caution"? Declare a person not a person, and you're experimenting on people, and possibly creating them for that purpose. But declare a non-person a person, and you're depriving yourself of knowledge that might help ACTUAL people. So uncertainty does not work to your advantage. [Edited to fix an extra "not" in the last paragrapn.]
  24. Avatar for Robert Lucien Howe
    Robert Lucien Howe
    When we get to this kind of 'hair pinching' the debate does get kind of lost/silly/bizarre. For instance say I want a human like 'robot' avatar for something I'm working on. I cant experiment on humans directly of course, but if I take say a cod fish and modify its DNA slightly to, say be functionally identical to a humans DNA, then is what I have a cod or a person? Moreover if I take human DNA then completely decompile it and then recompile it, is what I have then a person? Maybe surprisingly the technology to do both these things is possible within a window of only a few (maybe 10 to 20) years so it is not merely an academic question.
  25. Avatar for Paul Hoffman
    Paul Hoffman
    What they are doing is a violation of the Nuernberg Doctrine. Remember what it took to produce dolly the sheep? The best hope for age extension would require the vectoring of parts of the cancer gene into a human cell. Reprehensible ...
  26. Avatar for mike blasticky
    mike blasticky
    While to many (myself included) ethical concerns are paramount. None the less it will come to pass that modifying human embryos will be accepted by the medical/scientific community as well as the population at large. "If it is possible to do...it will be done."
  27. Avatar for John Dallas
    John Dallas
    If what is in the interest of people is wrong, I don't want to be right. If fetuses are allowed to be terminated, what can be wrong killing embryos? Men and women regularly randomly alter the genes of their sperm and embryos by taking medication, drugs, and special diets. Our currently accepted right to freedom of self determination affects future generations. Why should not our most intelligent people, "scientists" be able see if making controlled variations helps progress development. At the current rate of advancement, our sun will explode before we achieve a solution to interstellar travel. It's about time, it's running out, and we have the tools, but not the courage, to take a larger step forward. Just do it!
  28. Avatar for Jose Gros-Aymerich
    Jose Gros-Aymerich
    Genetic editing human embryos sounds as of dubious ethics, specially if the goal is not just therapy of a disease, (How high and of which nature are the risks involved in genetic edition compared with the unintervented outcome of the same embryo?), however, it looks as ethical attempting to eliminate from the embryo's cells a genetic trait that will for sure induce a severe disease, rather than generating several embryos and discarding, i.e., killing the 'ill' embryos. Sometimes good meets more difficulties than evildoing
  29. Avatar for GozieBoy
    GozieBoy
    That's it. I'm cancelling my subscription to Cell & Protein immediately!
  30. Avatar for Samuel Leuenberger
    Samuel Leuenberger
    Nature needs to clearly state if this paper was rejected on ethical grounds or not, this is absolutely disgusting to see that science could be censored on culturally biased opinions that have nothing to do with facts and the research of knowledge. This would be a real blow to the credibility of this publication if the morals of individuals are weighting in a paper and not its sole merit.
  31. Avatar for JohnnyMorales
    JohnnyMorales
    I agree but what is a mystery to me is why so many assume such decisions are ever rooted in anything else.
  32. Avatar for mark miller
    mark miller
    But honestly, what do you expect? The editors at Nature are not Vulcans. No one likes their priors challenged, even "friends of science." With friends like that, though, who needs friends?
  33. Avatar for Gordon Cash
    Gordon Cash
    I have been a Nature subscriber for many years, Mr. Leuenberger, and I completely agree with you. Nature's research editorial team should be completely transparent about this, and sooner rather than later.
  34. Avatar for Dominique Blanchard
    Dominique Blanchard
    The scientific community first should mobilize to express its point of view to the authors, the chief editor, the editorial board, and the publisher and second mobilize to explain this extremely powerful technology to the society.
  35. Avatar for mark miller
    mark miller
    The Giants are going all the way again this year! What this about "germ line editing"? Something about the Chinese and cooties? What I wanna know is if they're sending Timmy Lincecum to the Minors!
  36. Avatar for Margaret Weber
    Margaret Weber
    This might be a good thing if they could edit out the genomes of liberals.
  37. This comment was deleted.

  38. Avatar for Henry Mo
    Henry Mo
    Interesting, a typical biased Euro-North American who wants to publicly show off his/her "right" judgements. There is an old saying in our Chinese: One should examine him/herself before criticising others. Talking about human ethics, how was and is it judged when China was robbed and invaded by British, German, Austria, French, American, Russian, Italian, and damn Japanese and by using the gunpowder invented by our Chinese? How was and is it judged when you wests took the land from indigenous peoples of the Americas by killing? to us, which is true anti-human. Euro- North Americans will have the right to criticise others unless you return what you illegally acquired from this world and apologize, including indigenous peoples of the Americas, Africans, Middle Easterners, and Asians. Please restrain your biased showing off while you can not do the right thing.
  39. Avatar for Johnna Calverase
    Show parent comment
    Johnna Calverase
    Please enlighten us when, you know, embryos are people? Many are not ok with them being produced in the first place and do not consider them "surplus". Please reread you post carefully as you come across like an embryo yourself.
  40. Avatar for Pablo Velasco
    Show parent comment
    Pablo Velasco
    "Most of the world has arrived at at least a rough consensus that embryos are not people". Not everybody agrees with you, so there is no consensus. And just because everybody thinks something is right doesn't make it right. "Ethics are, or at least should be, about the interests of people." Ethics is about whether something is right or wrong, not about the interest of people.
  41. Avatar for Gordon Cash
    Gordon Cash
    And by what criteria, Mr. Velasco, other than the interests of people, do we determine whether something is right or wrong? In my experience, almost everyone who makes a statement such as yours wants to use his/her personal religious beliefs as the sole criteria. If I am attributing to you an opinion you do not actually hold, please feel free to correct me.
  42. Avatar for John Robin
    John Robin
    With life and death issues a person must probe his own beliefs most carefully, whether they are explicitly "religious" beliefs or not. Without a belief in some sort of objective moral standard, it's rather impossible to argue that "right" and "wrong" have any meaning in this or any context. We can argue passionately about experimenting upon unborn human beings only because any sane person can understand that "right" and "wrong" are objectively at stake in some way.
  43. Avatar for Lettuce Prey
    Lettuce Prey
    Over the millennia man has done a terrible job of playing God.
  44. Avatar for Robert Lucien Howe
    Robert Lucien Howe
    Try Try again.
  45. Avatar for mark miller
    mark miller
    If at first you don't succeed....
  46. Avatar for Paul Knoepfler
    Paul Knoepfler
    My perspectives on this development. http://wp.me/p1xWpk-4Mf Even for me as someone potentially supportive of human in vitro germline research, this paper makes me uncertain. Paul

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