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Japanese Team May Have Found Stem Cell "Holy Grail"

MANCHESTER-Since its publication in the journals Nature and Stem Cell on June 7, a report that Japanese researchers have produced embryo-like stem cells from the somatic cells of mice, have made headlines around the world and prompted speculation that the scientific community's brief obsession with cloning experiments for stem cell research is about to end.Although the paper's author,Shinya Yamanaka of Kyoto University,urged researchers not to stop using embryos for research,he told the London Times in an interview,"Neither eggs nor embryos are necessary.I've never worked with either."Yamanaka is in Britain presenting his findings this week to a conference on stem cell research at the University of Manchester.Yamanaka's experiments involved a mouse skin cell into which was introduced four proteins which "reprogram" the cell's nuclear DNA making it pluripotent-having the same qualities as a stem cell taken from a very early-stage embryo.Stem cells are those the body produces to replace and renew tissues.As such,they are sought by researchers for medical applications in curing diseases and injuries.Adult stem cells are now commonly used in some forms of cancer treatment and have seen success in experimental treatments of Parkinson's disease and diabetes, among others.Most researchers in stem cells agree that stem cells found in various parts of the body are,to greater or lesser degrees,limited in the different types of tissue they can produce.The pressure to obtain embryonic stem cells derives from their so-called "pluripotency,"the characteristic of the mass of cells found inside the embryo in the first week of its life that make them able to form every type of tissue in the body.If the Japanese team's claims are accurate,the discovery of a method of creating pluripotent stem cells exactly matched to the patient without killing an embryonic human being,could prove to be the "holy grail" of stem cell research, the equivalent of "transforming lead into gold".Another claim to have found this stem cell "holy grail" was that of Dr. William Hurlbut a professor at Stanford University, who, in 2004, proposed the creation of "quasi-embryos" that would yield such pluripotent cells. Hurlbut claimed in a paper that these quasi-embryos, while being created from human materials, did not qualify as "morally" human."Even if they're human-without that principle of life, are not moral entities,"he said.This suggestion,while it gained support among some pro-life advocates,was roundly condemned by others.Dr. Clem Persaud,a retired Professor of Microbiology and Biotechnology,called the proposal "deeply flawed."He said that the process would not create an unknown 'new entity,' but a severely disabled,cloned human being...
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