Human Cloning - Bartocillo, Aye Mee
Human Cloning - Bartocillo, Aye Mee
Human Cloning - Bartocillo, Aye Mee
Human Cloning
Human cloning is the creation of a genetically identical copy of a human. It does not
usually refer to monozygotic multiple births, human cell or tissue reproduction. The ethics of
cloning is an extremely controversial issue. The term is generally used to refer to artificial human
cloning; human clones in the form of identical twins are commonplace, with their cloning
occurring during the natural process of reproduction.
There are two commonly discussed types of human cloning: therapeutic cloning and
reproductive cloning. Therapeutic cloning involves cloning cells from an adult for use in
medicine and is an active area of research, while reproductive cloning would involve making
cloned humans. Such reproductive cloning has not been performed and is illegal in many
countries.
A third type of cloning called replacement cloning is a theoretical possibility, and would
be a combination of therapeutic and reproductive cloning. Replacement cloning would entail the
replacement of an extensively damaged, failed, or failing body through cloning followed by
whole or partial brain transplant.
This research was conducted to gain more information to further understand human
cloning. This paper will also discuss the different types of cloning and present some researches
on human cloning.
Objectives
1. Identify and differentiate the difference between therapeutic cloning and reproductive
cloning.
2. To enumerate some researches that was done in the context of human cloning.
This research will only focus on the information about human cloning. It will also discuss
the different types of human cloning and present some researches that include human cloning.
Definition of terms:
Human cloning - The term is generally used to refer to artificial human cloning; human clones in
the form of identical twins are commonplace, with their cloning occurring during the natural
process of reproduction.
Therapeutic cloning - involves cloning cells from an adult for use in medicine and is an active
area of research
Reproductive cloning - would involve making cloned humans. Such reproductive cloning has not
been performed and is illegal in many countries.
Researches:
Just five months later Jerry Hall of Washington University announced that he too had managed
to artificially twin identical human embryos in a process that has always been perfectly legal in
Britain, although requiring a licence. The embryos he used were defective and were destroyed
shortly after the experiments. Nevertheless, his work caused public outcry.
The event was reported in scientific language as part of a research paper in a journal but the
significance was completely missed. The trouble is that genetics is complicated and understood
by only a few journalists in any depth. Perhaps that is why the BBC decided when the news
broke about Dolly the sheep that the story should not be covered at all because it was not news.
This bizarre line was held for half a day after I first telephoned Press Association and the Sunday
Telegraph to tell them that another paper was about to run the story on the front page. The
Sunday Telegraph responded at 9pm Saturday night by stopping the paper and redoing their own
front page. Press Association ran two pages on it, sent all over the world. Within an hour
television companies globally were beginning to wake up. Within 48 hours President Clinton
was issuing emergency measures having been shocked by what was possible under US law.
One reason people have given for doing this kind of research is to make spare parts in the future.
Once an embryo has been twinned, one embryo can be implanted and allowed to develop into a
baby, while the other is frozen.
If the child later develops an illness such as leukaemia, then the frozen twin could be thawed and
implanted into a surrogate mother, to be culled for spare parts after a few months' gestation. You
and I may react against such ideas, but when sick or dying children are involved, pressures can
be enormous to do all that is scientifically possible. Parents are very persuasive. Who can stare a
beautiful child in the face and try to explain about ethics in the face of possible death, about
statistical chances and moral dangers ? These things are extremely difficult and genetics is
making choices more complex still.
A number of steps have already been taken. For example, tissue from aborted foetuses is already
used to treat adults. Time-warp twins have already been born - non-identical twins conceived in
the laboratory on the same day, but implanted 18 months apart. And it is not unknown for a
mother to agree to have another child for the express purpose of providing much needed
transplant material for the older child. Spare part production from clones would extend these
principles.
For some time, I have speculated that we would be able to go further: instead of merely
producing artificial twins identical to each other but not to their parents, we would one day be
able to produce several hundred identical children, just using human eggs and cells from an adult
(nuclear transfer).
This too was dismissed out of hand as alarmist and fanciful by leading authorities, despite the
fact that such experiments had already been carried out successfully in frogs as long ago as 1952.
Frogs are easier than mammals to manipulate which is probably why we heard in 1997 of
headless frogs rather than headless sheep. The truth is that when it comes to cloning of mammals
there has been at times a deliberate conspiracy of silence. At the very moment of such
protestations, advanced experiments of varying kinds were already taking place in utmost
secrecy.
Make no mistake: gene technology has the power to cure, feed, alter and destroy us, and many
scientists are scared of a massive public reaction which could stop their work - if you find out
what they are up to. There is a reluctance to tell the full story until afterwards.
Some scientists claim that cures for certain diseases will only be found by cloning human
embryos for research. Investors are not convinced: since UK Parliament approved human
cloning for research there have been less than five applications. One was a research facility in
Newcastle, the other was the Edinburgh creators of Dolly. Neither facility succeeded in raising
enough funds and most of the work quickly ground to a halt.
The fact is that cloned human embryos have been left behind by huge advances in adult stem cell
research, which has attracted large amounts of research funding.
How Human Cloning Will Work
On July 5, 1997, the most famous sheep in modern history was born. Ian Wilmut and a
group of Scottish scientists announced that they had successfully cloned a sheep named Dolly.
If you stood Dolly beside a "naturally" conceived sheep, you wouldn't notice any
differences between the two. In fact, to pinpoint the only major distinguishing factor between the
two, you'd have to go back to the time of conception because Dolly's embryo developed without
the presence of sperm. Instead, Dolly began as a cell from another sheep that was fused via
electricity with a donor egg. Just one sheep -- no hanky-panky involved.
While Dolly's birth marked an incredible scientific breakthrough, it also set off questions
in the scientific and global community about what -- or who -- might be next to be "duplicated."
Cloning sheep and other nonhuman animals seemed more ethically benign to some than
potentially cloning people. In response to such concerns in the United States, President Clinton
signed a five-year moratorium on federal funding for human cloning the same year of Dolly's
arrival.
Today, after more than a decade since Dolly, human cloning remains in its infancy.
Although cloning technology has improved, the process still has a slim success rate of 1 to 4
percent . That being said, science is headed in that direction -- pending governmental restraints.
Scientists have cloned a variety of animals, including mice, sheep, pigs, cows and dogs.
In 2006, scientists cloned the first primate embryos of a rhesus monkey. Then, in early 2008, the
FDA officially deemed milk and meat products from cloned animals and their offspring safe to
eat.
There are many ways in which in which human cloning is expected to benefit mankind. Below
is a list that is far from complete.
• Dr. Richard Seed, one of the leading proponents of human cloning technology, suggests
that it may someday be possible to reverse the aging process because of what we learn
from cloning.
• Human cloning technology could be used to reverse heart attacks. Scientists believe that
they may be able to treat heart attack victims by cloning their healthy heart cells and
injecting them into the areas of the heart that have been damaged. Heart disease is the
number one killer in the United States and several other industrialized countries.
• There has been a breakthrough with human stem cells. Embryonic stem cells can be
grown to produce organs or tissues to repair or replace damaged ones. Skin for burn
victims, brain cells for the brain damaged, spinal cord cells for quadriplegics and
paraplegics, hearts, lungs, livers, and kidneys could be produced. By combining this
technology with human cloning technology it may be possible to produce needed tissue
for suffering people that will be free of rejection by their immune systems. Conditions
such as Alzheimer's disease, Parkinson's disease, diabetes, heart failure, degenerative
joint disease, and other problems may be made curable if human cloning and its
technology are not banned.
• Infertility. With cloning, infertile couples could have children. Despite getting a fair
amount of publicity in the news current treatments for infertility, in terms of percentages,
are not very successful. One estimate is that current infertility treatments are less than 10
percent successful. Couples go through physically and emotionally painful procedures
for a small chance of having children. Many couples run out of time and money without
successfully having children. Human cloning could make it possible for many more
infertile couples to have children than ever before possible.
• Plastic, reconstructive, and cosmetic surgery. Because of human cloning and its
technology the days of silicone breast implants and other cosmetic procedures that may
cause immune disease should soon be over. With the new technology, instead of using
materials foreign to the body for such procedures, doctors will be able to manufacture
bone, fat, connective tissue, or cartilage that matches the patients tissues exactly. Anyone
will able to have their appearance altered to their satisfaction without the leaking of
silicone gel into their bodies or the other problems that occur with present day plastic
surgery. Victims of terrible accidents that deform the face should now be able to have
their features repaired with new, safer, technology. Limbs for amputees may be able to be
regenerated.
• Breast implants. Most people are aware of the breast implant fiasco in which hundreds of
thousands of women received silicone breast implants for cosmetic reasons. Many came
to believe that the implants were making them ill with diseases of their immune systems.
With human cloning and its technology breast augmentation and other forms of cosmetic
surgery could be done with implants that would not be any different from the person's
normal tissues.
• Defective genes. The average person carries 8 defective genes inside them. These
defective genes allow people to become sick when they would otherwise remain healthy.
With human cloning and its technology it may be possible to ensure that we no longer
suffer because of our defective genes.
• Down's syndrome. Those women at high risk for Down's syndrome can avoid that risk by
cloning.
• Tay-Sachs disease. This is an autosomal recessive genetic disorder could be prevented by
using cloning to ensure that a child does not express the gene for the disorder
• Liver failure. We may be able to clone livers for liver transplants
• Kidney failure. We may be able to clone kidneys for kidney transplants
• Leukemia. We should be able to clone the bone marrow for children and adults suffering
from leukemia. This is expected to be one of the first benefits to come from cloning
technology.
• Cancer. We may learn how to switch cells on and off through cloning and thus be able to
cure cancer. Scientists still do not know exactly how cells differentiate into specific
kinds of tissue, nor to they understand why cancerous cells lose their differentiation.
Cloning, at long last, may be the key to understanding differentiation and cancer.
• Cystic fibrosis. We may be able to produce effective genetic therapy against cystic
fibrosis. Ian Wilmut and colleagues are already working on this problem.
• Spinal cord injury. We may learn to grow nerves or the spinal cord back again when they
are injured. Quadriplegics might be able to get out of their wheelchairs and walk again.
Christopher Reeves, the man who played Superman, might be able to walk again.
• Testing for genetic disease. Cloning technology can be used to test for and perhaps cure
genetic diseases.
The above list only scratches the surface of what human cloning technology can do for mankind.
The suffering that can be relieved is staggering. This new technology heralds a new era of
unparalleled advancement in medicine if people will release their fears and let the benefits
begin. Why should another child die from leukemia when if the technology is allowed we
should be able to cure it in a few years time?
From various e-mail sent to the Human Cloning Foundation, it is clear that many people
would support human cloning in the following situations:
1) A couple has one child then they become infertile and cannot have more children. Cloning
would enable such a couple to have a second child, perhaps a younger twin of the child they
already have.
2) A child is lost soon after birth to a tragic accident. Many parents have written the HCF after
losing a baby in a fire, car accident, or other unavoidable disaster. These grief stricken parents
often say that they would like to have their perfect baby back. Human cloning would allow such
parents to have a twin of their lost baby, but it would be like other twins, a unique individual and
not a carbon copy of the child that was lost under heartbreaking circumstances.
3) A woman who through some medical emergency ended up having a hysterectomy before
being married or having children. Such women have been stripped of their ability to have
children. These women need a surrogate mother to have a child of their own DNA, which can be
done either by human cloning or by in vitro fertilization.
4) A boy graduates from high school at age 18. He goes to a pool party to celebrate. He confuses
the deep end and shallow end and dives head first into the pool, breaking his neck and becoming
a quadriplegic. At age 19 he has his first urinary tract infection because of an indwelling urinary
catheter and continues to suffer from them the rest of his life. At age 20 he comes down with
herpes zoster of the trigeminal nerve. He suffers chronic unbearable pain. At age 21 he inherits a
10 million dollar trust fund. He never marries or has children. At age 40 after hearing about
Dolly being a clone, he changes his will and has his DNA stored for future human cloning. His
future mother will be awarded one million dollars to have him and raise him. His DNA clone
will inherit a trust fund. He leaves five million to spinal cord research. He dies feeling that
although he was robbed of normal life, his twin/clone will lead a better life.
5) Two parents have a baby boy. Unfortunately the baby has muscular dystrophy. They have
another child and it's another boy with muscular dystrophy. They decide not to have any more
children. Each boy has over 20 operations as doctors attempt to keep them healthy and mobile.
Both boys die as teenagers. The childless parents donate their estate to curing muscular
dystrophy and to having their boys cloned when medical science advances enough so that their
DNA can live again, but free of muscular dystrophy.
Conclusion:
Simon Smith. The Benefits of Human Cloning. Date retrieved: 03-13-11 from
http://www.humancloning.org/benefits.php