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Mari, Sheryll Anne C. 1
UNIT IX: GENETIC ENGINEERING
Mari – Mupas
2nd year Section C
Group 4
Mari, Sheryll Anne C. 2
OBJECTIVES
1. understand key terms and concepts related to the science of genetic engineering
2. discover ethical issues surrounding the practice of genetic engineering in reproductive medicine
Mari, Sheryll Anne C. 3
TOPICS OF DISCUSSION
Ethical Principles Therapeutic Genetics and the Human
Genome Project Cloning Prenatal and Genetic Testing and
Counseling Adult and Stem Cell Research and Therapy Virtues of a Catholic Health Care Giver
Mari, Sheryll Anne C. 4
CATECHISM OF THE CATHOLIC CHURCH (2292)
“scientific, medical or psychological experiments on human individuals or groups can contribute to healing the sick and the advancement of public health. Research or experimentation on the human being cannot legitimate acts that are in themselves contrary to the dignity of persons.”
Mari, Sheryll Anne C. 5
INTRODUCTION
“And God saw every thing that he had made, and, behold, [it was] very good..”
GENESIS 1:31
Mari, Sheryll Anne C. 6
GENETIC ENGINEERING
the artificial modification of the genetic code of a living organism.
Genes from one organism are inserted in another organism, most often across natural species boundaries.
The scientific alteration of genes or genetic material to produce desirable new traits in organisms or to eliminate undesirable ones
Mari, Sheryll Anne C. 7
GENETIC ENGINEERING
Makes use of the techniques of molecular cloning and transformation
technology that allows one : to identify genes, to isolate them from the chromosomes, and to splice them into other chromosomes of beings of the
same or different species.
Mari, Sheryll Anne C. 8
TO ELIMINATE ACTUAL OR POTENTIAL DISEASE OR TO IMPROVE THE HUMAN GENOTYPE:
3 DIFFERENT WAYS: Splicing into human cells a healthy gene to
displace a defective gene Administering pharmaceuticals containing
altered cells Stifling harmful genes by interfering with their
protein production
Mari, Sheryll Anne C. 9
“A strictly therapeutic intervention whose explicit objective is the healing of various maladies such as those stemming from deficiencies of chromosomes will, in principle, be considered desirable, provided it is directed to the true promotion of the personal well-being of man and does not infringe on his integrity or worsen his conditions of life. Such an intervention, indeed, would fall within the logic of the Christian moral tradition,”
POPE JOHN PAUL II, DANGERS OF GENETIC MANIPULATION
Mari, Sheryll Anne C. 10
POPE JOHN PAUL II, DANGERS OF GENETIC MANIPULATION
“Each human person, in his absolutely unique singularity, is constituted not only by his spirit, but by his body as well.”
Mari, Sheryll Anne C. 11
POPE JOHN PAUL II, DANGERS OF GENETIC MANIPULATION
“respect the fundamental dignity of men and the common biological nature which is at the base of liberty, avoiding manipulations that tend to modify genetic inheritance and to create groups of different men at the risk of causing new cases of marginalization in society.”
Mari, Sheryll Anne C. 12
POPE JOHN PAUL II, DANGERS OF GENETIC MANIPULATION
“Genetic manipulation becomes arbitrary and unjust when it reduces life to an object, when it forgets that it is dealing with a human subject, capable of intelligence and freedom, worthy of respect whatever may be their limitations; or when it treats this person in terms of criteria not founded on the integral reality of the human person, at the risk of infringing upon his dignity. In this case, it exposes the individual to the caprice of others, thus depriving him of his autonomy.”
ETHICAL CONCERNS
Jacqueline T. Mupas
ETHICAL CONCERNSSanctity of human lifeProtection of human dignityAcceptance of social responsibilities
Safekeeping of God’s creation
SANCTITY OF HUMAN LIFE
If genetic determinism reduces the meaning of humanhood to the mechanistic out workings of molecular biology, there is serious potential for devaluing human life
SANCTITY OF HUMAN LIFE
New capacities for prenatal genetic testing, including the examination of human pre-embryos prior to implantation, generate questions about the value of human life when it is genetically defective How serious must a genetic defect, prenatally
diagnosed, be before it is an ethically legitimate reason for discarding a pre-embryo or for inducing an abortion?
SANCTITY OF HUMAN LIFE
Some conditions, such as trisomy 18, are generally deemed incompatible with life
But the relative seriousness of most genetic defects is a matter of judgement
PROTECTION OF HUMAN DIGNITY
Protection of personal privacy and confidentiality
Knowledge about a person’s genetic profile could be of significant value to potential employers, insurance companies, and to those related to the person
Whether genetic testing should be voluntary or mandatory, when and whom the testing should be done, how much and with whom the resulting information should be shared are matters of significant ethical concern
PROTECTION OF HUMAN DIGNITY
At stake is the protection of persons from stigma and unfair discrimination on the basis of their genetic makeup
PROTECTION OF HUMAN DIGNITY
Possibility of intentionally altering the human gene pool
Medically interventions for genetic diseases may be aimed either at the treatment of bodily cells that are genetically defective or at the alteration of reproductive cells
Changes in human reproductive cells could become a permanent part of the human gene pool
PROTECTION OF HUMAN DIGNITY
Interventions may also extend beyond the treatment of disease and include attempts to enhance what have formerly been considered normal human characteristics
What are the implications for the meaning of being human, for example, if interventions aimed at enhancing human intelligence or physique become available?
ACCEPTANCE OF SOCIAL RESPONSIBILITIES
Ethics of social policies Boundaries between individual liberties and
social responsibilities
Should society develop policies designed to encourage either positive or negative eugenics?
Should individuals with serious genetic disorders be given full procreative liberty?
ACCEPTANCE OF SOCIAL RESPONSIBILITIES
Use of society’s resources
Amount of social resources that should be spent for interventions in human genetics when more basic health care is not fully available
Distribution of the benefits and burdens of genetic interventions and how they will be shared by rich and poor within society
STEWARDSHIP OF GOD’S CREATION
Many changes could be made in various species that inhabit the earth
These changes have the potential for being both permanent and unpredictable
What limits to genetic change, if any, should be accepted?
Are there boundaries that should not be crossed in transferring genes from one life form to another?
CHRISTIAN PRINCIPLES FOR GENETIC INTERVENTIONS
Jacqueline T. Mupas
CONFIDENTIALITY
Christian love requires that trust be maintained in human relationships
In order to safeguard personal privacy and protect against unfair discrimination, information about a person’s genetic constitution should be kept confidential unless the person elects to share the knowledge with others
CONFIDENTIALITY
TRUTHFULNESS
The Christian obligation to be truthful requires that the results of genetic testing be honestly reported to the person tested or to responsible family members if the person is incapable of understanding the information (Eph. 4:25)
HONORING GOD’S IMAGE
In all of God’s creation, only human beings were created in the image of God (Gen 1:26-27)
The Christian acknowledgement of God’s wisdom and power in creation should lead to caution in attempts to alter permanently the human gene pool (Gen 1:31)
LIMIT: treatment of individuals with genetic disorders (somatic cell therapies)
NOT INCLUDE: change human reproductive cells (germ cell alterations)
HONORING GOD’S IMAGE
All interventions in human beings for genetic reasons should be taken with great moral caution and with appropriate protection of human life at all stages of its development
STEWARDSHIP OF CREATION
Safeguarding of God’s creation includes esteem for the diversity and ecological balance of the natural world with its countless species of living creatures (Gen 1)
Genetic interventions with plants and animals should show respect for the rich variety of life forms
Exploitations and manipulations that would destroy natural balance or degrade God’s created world should be prohibited
NONVIOLENCE
Using genetic manipulation to develop means of warfare is a direct affront to Christian values of peace and life
It is morally unacceptable to abuse God’s creation by changing life forms into weapons of destruction (Rev. 11:18)
FAIRNESS
God loves all human beings, regardless of their perceived social status (Acts 10:34)
The benefits of genetic research should be accessible to people in need without unfair discrimination
HUMAN DIGNITY
Created in God’s image, human beings are more than the sum of their genes (Gen. 1:27; Acts 17:28)
Should not be reduced to genetic mechanisms
People should be treated with dignity and respect of their individual qualities, and not be stereotyped on the basis of their genetic heritage
GENE THERAPY
GENE THERAPY
insertion of genes into an individual's cells and tissues to treat a disease, and hereditary diseases in which a defective mutant allele is replaced with a functional one
GENE THERAPY USING AN ADENOVIRUS VECTOR
FIRST APPROVED GENE THERAPY On September 14, 1990 U.S. National Institutes of Health W. French Anderson, M.D., and his colleagues R.
Michael Blaese, M.D., C. Bouzaid, M.D., and Kenneth Culver, M.D
on four-year old Ashanthi DeSilva. Born with a rare genetic disease called severe combined immunodeficiency (SCID)
she lacked a healthy immune system, and was vulnerable to every passing germ or infection.
avoids contact with people outside her family, remaining in the sterile environment of her home, and battling frequent illnesses with massive amounts of antibiotics.
FIRST APPROVED GENE THERAPY doctors removed white blood cells from the
child's body let the cells grow in the lab inserted the missing gene into the cells and then infused the genetically modified blood
cells back into the patient's bloodstream. the therapy strengthened Ashanthi's immune
system by 40% she no longer has recurrent colds, she has been
allowed to attend school, and she was immunized against whooping cough.
This procedure was not a cure; the white blood cells treated genetically only work for a few months, after which the process must be repeated (VII, Thompson [First] 1993).
FIRST APPROVED GENE THERAPY
As of early 2007, she was still in good health, and she was attending college.
However, there is no consensus on what portion of her improvement should be attributed to gene therapy versus other treatments.
Some would state that the case is of great importance despite its indefinite results, if only because it demonstrated that gene therapy could be practically attempted without adverse consequences.
GENE THERAPY BASIC PROCESS a "corrected" gene - inserted into the genome to
replace an "abnormal," disease-causing gene Carrier called “vector”
viruses - genetically altered to carry normal human DNA
Have evolved a way of encapsulating and delivering their genes to human cells in a pathogenic manner
Target cells - patient's liver or lung cells are infected with the vector
The vector then unloads its genetic material containing the therapeutic human gene into the target cell.
The generation of a functional protein product from the therapeutic gene restores the target cell to a normal state.
TYPES OF GENE THERAPY
Germ line gene therapy
Somatic cell gene therapy
GERM LINE GENE THERAPY
germ cells, i.e., sperms or eggs, are modified by the introduction of functional genes, which are ordinarily integrated into their genomes
the change due to therapy would be heritable and would be passed on to later generations.
This approach, theoretically, should be highly effective in counteracting genetic disorders.
However, this option is prohibited for application in human beings, at least for the present, for a variety of technical and ethical reasons.
SOMATIC CELL GENE THERAPY
the gene is introduced only in somatic cells, especially of these tissues in which expression of the concerned gene is critical for health.
Expression of the introduced gene relieves/ eliminates symptoms of the disorder, but this effect is not heritable as it does not involve the germ line.
At present, somatic cell therapy is the only feasible option, and clinical trials addressing a variety of conditions have already begun.
BROAD METHODS
A normal gene may be inserted into a nonspecific location within the genome to replace a nonfunctional gene. This approach is most common.
An abnormal gene could be swapped for a normal gene through homologous recombination.
The abnormal gene could be repaired through selective reverse mutation, which returns the gene to its normal function.
The regulation (the degree to which a gene is turned on or off) of a particular gene could be altered.
WHAT IS THE CURRENT STATUS OF GENE THERAPY RESEARCH?
The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has not yet approved any human gene therapy product for sale.
Current gene therapy is experimental and has not proven very successful in clinical trials.
Little progress has been made since the first gene therapy clinical trial began in 1990.
WHAT IS THE CURRENT STATUS OF GENE THERAPY RESEARCH?
In 1999, gene therapy suffered a major setback with the death of 18-year-old Jesse Gelsinger. Jesse was participating in a gene therapy trial for
ornithine transcarboxylase deficiency (OTCD). He died from multiple organ failures 4 days after
starting the treatment. His death is believed to have been triggered by a
severe immune response to the adenovirus carrier.
WHAT IS THE CURRENT STATUS OF GENE THERAPY RESEARCH?
January 2003 - the FDA placed a temporary halt on all gene therapy trials using retroviral vectors in blood stem cells.
FDA took this action after it learned that a second child treated in a French gene therapy trial had developed a leukemia-like condition.
Both this child and another who had developed a similar condition in August 2002 had been successfully treated by gene therapy for X-linked severe combined immunodeficiency disease (X-SCID), also known as "bubble baby syndrome."
WHAT IS THE CURRENT STATUS OF GENE THERAPY RESEARCH?
April of 2003 - the FDA eased the ban on gene therapy trials using retroviral vectors in blood stem cells
PROBLEMS
Gene Therapy
SHORT-LIVED NATURE OF GENE THERAPY Before gene therapy can become a
permanent cure for any condition, the therapeutic DNA introduced into target cells must remain functional and the cells containing the therapeutic DNA must be long-lived and stable
Problems with integrating therapeutic DNA into the genome and the rapidly dividing nature of many cells prevent gene therapy from achieving any long-term benefits
Patients will have to undergo multiple rounds of gene therapy
IMMUNE RESPONSE
Anytime a foreign object is introduced into human tissues, the immune system has evolved to attack the invader
The risk of stimulating the immune system in a way that reduces gene therapy effectiveness is always a possibility.
the immune system's enhanced response to invaders it has seen before makes it difficult for gene therapy to be repeated in patients.
PROBLEMS WITH VIRAL VECTORS
Viruses, while the carrier of choice in most gene therapy studies, present a variety of potential problems to the patient --toxicity, immune and inflammatory responses, and gene control and targeting issues
there is always the fear that the viral vector, once inside the patient, may recover its ability to cause disease.
MULTIGENE DISORDERS
Conditions or disorders that arise from mutations in a single gene are the best candidates for gene therapy.
Unfortunately, some of the most commonly occurring disorders, such as heart disease, high blood pressure, Alzheimer's disease, arthritis, and diabetes, are caused by the combined effects of variations in many genes.
difficult to treat effectively using gene therapy
CHANCE OF INDUCING A TUMOR (INSERTIONAL MUTAGENESIS)
If the DNA is integrated in the wrong place in the genome, for example in a tumor suppressor gene, it could induce a tumor.
occurred in clinical trials for X-linked severe combined immunodeficiency (X-SCID) patients, in which hematopoietic stem cells were transduced with a corrective transgene using a retrovirus, and this led to the development of T cell leukemia in 3 of 20 patients.
RELIGIOUS CONCERNS
humans were created in God's image, alteration of an individual's genes is
considered as tampering or corrupting God's work
HUMAN GENOME PROJECT
Mercado, Kriselle S.
HUMAN GENOME PROJECT
an international scientific research project. Its primary goals are to determine the
sequence of chemical base pairs which make up DNA and to identify the more than 20,000 genes of the human genome.
58
HUMAN GENOME PROJECT
objective of the HGP is to understand the genetic makeup of the human species
nonhuman organisms such as Escherichia coli, the fruit fly, and the laboratory mouse.
It remains one of the largest investigational projects in modern science.
59
APRIL 14, 2003COMPLETION OF THE
HUMAN GENOME PROJECT
“We’ve discovered the secret of life.”Francis Crick28 February 1953
50 years after elucidation of the
structure of DNA
DNA: DEOXYRIBONUCLEIC ACID
61
Double helixMade up of four kinds of bases: A, T, G, C
A always pairs with T
G always pairs with C
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Chromosome
Cell
Nucleus
DNA
THE HUMAN GENOMEGenome: the totality of genetic
information in an organism23 chromosomes (diploid content = 46)~30,000 genes~ 3 billion bases
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HISTORY OF THE HUMAN GENOME PROJECT (HGP)The US Department of Energy (DOE)
and the Human Genome
1983 - National Laboratories of the DOE begin producing libraries of human chromosomes
1988 - DOE and US National Institutes of Health (NIH) sign a memorandum of understanding outlining their cooperative effort in genome research
64
HISTORY OF THE HUMAN GENOME PROJECT (HGP)
1988 - HUGO (Human Genome Organization) founded by genome scientists
1989 - DOE and NIH establish a working group to study the Ethical, Legal and Social Implications (ELSI) of the HGP
1990 - DOE and NIH present a 5-year HGP plan to the US Congress. This marks the beginning of the 15-year project
65
HISTORY OF THE HUMAN GENOME PROJECT (HGP)
1998 - Celera Genomics and Incyte Pharmaceuticals (both private companies) announce plans to sequence the human genome before the public-funded HGP is completed
2000 - Craig Venter of Celera and Francis Collins of NIH (representing the HGP) jointly announce the completion of a “working draft” of the human genome
2001 – Publication of the Human Genome Sequence in the journals Nature and Science
66
HISTORY OF THE HUMAN GENOME PROJECT (HGP) 2003 - Ongoing sequencing led to the
announcement of the essentially complete genome. It was 2 years earlier than planned.
May 2006, another milestone was passed on the way to completion of the project, when the sequence of the last chromosome was published in the journal Nature.
67
GOALS OF HUMAN GENOME PROJECT
Identify all the genes in the human genome Complete the sequence of 3 billion bases of the
human genome Store the human genome information in
databases Develop tools for analysis of the data
68
WHOSE DNA WAS ACTUALLY SEQUENCED?
The HGP sequenced a composite genome from several different people
The sequence was generated from 10 to 20 primary samples that were taken from many anonymous donors
Donors belong to diverse ethnic and racial backgrounds
69
INFORMATION DERIVED FROM THE HGP
size of human genome: 3.1647 billion base pairs (bp)
number of human genes: ~30,000
genes vary in length and can cover thousands of bases
avg. size: ~3,000 bp70
INFORMATION DERIVED FROM THE HGP
71
less than 2% of the human less than 2% of the human genome codes for proteinsgenome codes for proteins
almost all (99.9%) nucleotide bases are exactly the same in all people
BENEFITS AND APPLICATIONS
Medical benefitsMicrobial genome researchDNA forensicsEvolution and human migration
Risk assessment
72
BENEFITS OF HGP RESEARCH MEDICAL BENEFITS
73
improved diagnosis of disease
earlier detection of predispositions to disease
rational drug design gene therapy and control
systems for drugs pharmacogenomics
“personal drugs” organ replacement
BENEFITS OF HGP RESEARCH MICROBIAL GENOME RESEARCH
74
environmental monitoring
protection from biological and chemical warfare
safe, efficient toxic waste cleanup
BENEFITS OF HGP RESEARCH DNA FORENSICS
75
identify potential suspects at crime scenes
identify crime and catastrophe victims
establish paternity and other family relations
match organ donors with recipients in transplant programs
BENEFITS OF HGP RESEARCHEVOLUTION AND HUMAN MIGRATION
76
Comparison of sequences of genetically, racially and culturally diverse people
Comparison of sequences of people geographically apart but apparently related
Study of evolution of humanoid species and modern humans
BENEFITS OF HGP RESEARCHRISK ASSESSMENT
77
assess health damage and risks caused by exposure to:
mutagens radiation cancer -
causing toxins reduce the
likelihood of heritable mutations
PROJECT GOALS NOW To identify the function of the human genome To understand how and why genes can cause
prevent disease To speed up the use of genetic information in
biomedical research and put it to work
78
ETHICAL, LEGAL AND SOCIAL ISSUES (ELSI)
Privacy issues and fair use of genetic information
social implications and the ability of patients to give informed consent to increasingly complex and controversial procedures.
foundational principles of human dignity and the common good.
79
ETHICAL, LEGAL AND SOCIAL ISSUES (ELSI)
The integration of genetic technologies into the clinical setting
Issues surrounding research ethics The education of the public and of
professionals alike
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Mari, Sheryll Anne C. 81
CLONING
Mari, S
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ll Anne C
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Cloning
Mari, Sheryll Anne C. 83
CLONING ---PCBE
A form of reproduction in which offspring result not from the chance union of egg and sperm
(sexual reproduction) but from the deliberate replication of the genetic
makeup of another single individual (asexual reproduction).
Mari, Sheryll Anne C. 84
HUMAN CLONING
The asexual production of a new human organism that is, at all stages of development, genetically virtually identical to a currently existing or previously existing human being.
SCNT (Somatic Cell Nuclei Transfer)
Mari, Sheryll Anne C. 85
REPRODUCTIVE CLONING
Termed by the PCBE as “cloning-to-produce-children”
Production of a cloned human embryo, formed for the (proximate) purpose of initiating a pregnancy, with the (ultimate) goal of producing a child who will be genetically virtually identical to a currently existing or previously existing individual.
Mari, Sheryll Anne C. 86
REPRODUCTIVE CLONING
not truly an identical clone of the donor animal. errors or incompleteness in the reprogramming
process cause the high rates of death, deformity, and disability observed among animal clones.
Mari, Sheryll Anne C. 87
THERAPEUTIC CLONING
“Cloning-for-biomedical-research” Production of a cloned human embryo, formed for
the (proximate) purpose of using it in research or for extracting its stem cells, with the (ultimate) goals of gaining scientific knowledge of normal and abnormal development and of developing cures for human diseases
Mari, Sheryll Anne C. 88
THERAPEUTIC CLONING
The goal of this process is not to create cloned human beings, but rather to harvest stem cells that can be used to study human development and to treat disease
used in humans to produce whole organs from single cells or to produce healthy cells that can replace damaged cells in degenerative diseases such as Alzheimer's or Parkinson's.
Mari, Sheryll Anne C. 89
REPRODUCTIVE CLONING: +
allows infertile couples or others to have genetically-related children;
permits couples at risk of conceiving a child with a genetic disease to avoid having an afflicted child;
allows the bearing of a child who could become an ideal transplant donor for a particular patient in need;
enables a parent to keep a living connection with a dead or dying child or spouse; or enable individuals or society to try to “replicate” individuals of great talent or beauty.
Mari, Sheryll Anne C. 90
USES OF REPRODUCTIVE CLONING
If success rate is improved, it can be used to develop efficient ways to reliably reproduce animals with special qualities
used to repopulate endangered animals or animals that are difficult to breed.
Mari, Sheryll Anne C. 91
ETHICS ON REPRODUCTIVE CLONING
safety concerns and the likelihood of harm to those involved
The principles of freedom, equality, and human dignity
Problems of identity and individuality Concerns regarding manufacture The prospect of new eugenics Troubled Family Relations Effects on Society
Mari, Sheryll Anne C. 92
ETHICAL ASSESSMENT OF THERAPEUTIC CLONING
It involves deliberate production, use, and ultimate destruction of cloned human embryos
It exploits and destroys developing human life
Mari, S
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Cloning from adult animals was introduced to the public in 1997 when scientists announced the birth of Dolly, the first animal cloned in this way.
The real key to cloning an adult animal is the ability to reprogram the skin cell nucleus and cause it to begin developing as if it was a newly fertilized egg.
Mari, Sheryll Anne C. 94
5 BASIC STEPS
Cloning requires specialized microsurgery tools and involves five basic steps:
1. Enucleation of the recipient egg 2. Transfer of the donor cell into the recipient egg 3. Fusion of the donor cell to the recipient egg 4. Culturing the resulting cloned embryo in the incubator 5. Transferring the developing embryo into the reproductive tract of a surrogate mother
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Sheryll Anne C.
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PROCESS OF CLONING
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SOMATIC CELL NUCLEI TRANSFER
Isolation of a somatic cell
Transfer of the nucleus
Freshly Fertilized Zygote
Embryo Implanted into aSurrogate Mother
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ll Anne C
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FERTILIZATION VS. SCNT
the sperm and egg both contain one set of chromosomes. When the sperm and egg join, the resulting zygote ends up with two sets - one from the father (sperm) and one from the mother (egg).
the egg cell's single set of chromosomes is removed. It is replaced by the nucleus from a somatic cell, which already contains two complete sets of chromosomes. Therefore, in the resulting embryo, both sets of chromosomes come from the somatic cell.
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Sheryll Anne C.
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ARTIFICIAL EMBRYO TWINNING
the relatively low-tech version of cloning. As the name suggests, this technology mimics the natural process of creating identical twins.
Mari, Sheryll Anne C. 99
XENOTRANSPLANTATION
Another potential application of cloning to organ transplants is the creation of genetically modified pigs from which organs suitable for human transplants could be harvested .
Mari, Sheryll Anne C. 100
RECOMBINANT DNA TECHNOLOGY
important for learning about other related technologies, such as gene therapy, genetic engineering of organisms, and sequencing genomes.
used to treat certain genetic conditions by introducing virus vectors that carry corrected copies of faulty genes into the cells of a host organism.
Mari, Sheryll Anne C. 101
RECOMBINANT DNA TECHNOLOGY
Genes from different organisms that improve taste and nutritional value or provide resistance to particular types of disease can be used to genetically engineer food crops.
Mari, Sheryll Anne C. 102
RISKS OF CLONING
expensive and highly inefficient More than 90% of cloning attempts fail to produce
viable offspring cloned animals tend to have more compromised
immune function and higher rates of infection, tumor growth, and other disorders
Mari, Sheryll Anne C. 103
RISKS OF CLONING
Many cloned animals have not lived long enough to generate good data about how clones age.
Problems also may result from programming errors in the genetic material from a donor cell.
Mari, Sheryll Anne C. 104
CLONING
In 1952, the first animal, a tadpole, was cloned.
Before the creation of Dolly, the first mammal cloned from the cell of an adult animal, clones were created from embryonic cells.
Hundreds of cloned animals exist today, but the number of different species is limited.
Mari, Sheryll Anne C. 105
DOLLY THE SHEEP• Dolly the sheep, the
world's first cloned adult animal.
• In February 14 2003, he was put to death by lethal injection due to arthritis
• Dolly was a mother to six lambs, bred the old-fashioned way.
Mari, Sheryll Anne C. 106
SHOULD HUMANS BE CLONED?
Due to the inefficiency of animal cloning (only about 1 or 2 viable offspring for every 100 experiments) and the lack of understanding about reproductive cloning, many scientists and physicians strongly believe that it would be unethical to attempt to clone humans.
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Sheryll Anne C.
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Italian fertility specialist Severino Antinori speaks at a conference on human cloning in Rome on March 9 2001. The Italian medical authorities warned that Dr Antinori risked losing his right to practise in Italy because of his plans to clone human beings.
Mari, Sheryll Anne C. 108
“REFLECTIONS ON CLONING”
June 25, 1997 Vatican
1) Dignity of human procreation
2) Dignity accorded to each person without discrimination
3) Basic human relationships
Mari, Sheryll Anne C. 109ETHICAL PROBLEMS CONNECTED WITH HUMAN CLONING
PONTIFICIA ACADEMIA PRO VITA REFLECTIONS ON CLONING
DIGNITY OF HUMAN PROCREATION
“It represents a radical manipulation of the constitutive relationality and
complementarity which is at the origin of human procreation in both its biological and strictly personal aspects. It tends to make
bisexuality a purely functional left-over, given that an ovum must be used without its nucleus in order to make room for the clone-
embryo and requires, for now, a female womb so that its development may be
brought to term”
Mari, Sheryll Anne C. 110ETHICAL PROBLEMS CONNECTED WITH HUMAN CLONING
PONTIFICIA ACADEMIA PRO VITA REFLECTIONS ON CLONING
DIGNITY OF HUMAN PROCREATION
“The illicitness of cloning is derived…
…from the absence of a personal act of procreative love since it involves asexual, agamic reproduction and, in short, from the offence to the Creator's design”
Mari, Sheryll Anne C. 111ETHICAL PROBLEMS CONNECTED WITH HUMAN CLONING
PONTIFICIA ACADEMIA PRO VITA REFLECTIONS ON CLONING
DIGNITY ACCORDED TO EACH PERSON WITHOUT DISCRIMINATION
“Human cloning must also be judged negative with regard to the dignity of the person cloned, who enters the world by virtue of being the "copy" (even if only a biological copy) of another being: this practice paves the way to the clone's radical suffering, for his psychic identity is jeopardized by the real or even by the merely virtual presence of his ‘other’.”
Mari, Sheryll Anne C. 112ETHICAL PROBLEMS CONNECTED WITH HUMAN CLONING
PONTIFICIA ACADEMIA PRO VITA REFLECTIONS ON CLONING
DIGNITY ACCORDED TO EACH PERSON WITHOUT DISCRIMINATION
“The human body is an integral part of every individual's dignity and personal identity,
and it is not permissible to use women as a source of ova for conducting cloning
experiments.”
Mari, Sheryll Anne C. 113ETHICAL PROBLEMS CONNECTED WITH HUMAN CLONING
PONTIFICIA ACADEMIA PRO VITA REFLECTIONS ON CLONING
BASIC HUMAN RELATIONSHIPS
“In the cloning process the basic relationships of the human person are perverted: filiation, consanguinity, kinship, parenthood.”
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4"Values in a Time of Upheaval”By: Pope Benedict XVI
“…the quiet wasting away of human dignity."
“…more dangerous threat than weapons of mass destruction.”
Mari, Sheryll Anne C. 115
In 2005, the United Nations adopted the Declaration on Human Cloning which “prohibit[s] all forms of human cloning inasmuch as they are incompatible with human dignity and the protection of human life.”