Unfertilized monkey eggs make stem cells. (Biology).A biotech firm recently made news by claiming to have cloned human embryos in order to produce medically useful stem cells stem cells, unspecialized human or animal cells that can produce mature specialized body cells and at the same time replicate themselves. Embryonic stem cells are derived from a blastocyst (the blastula typical of placental mammals; see embryo), which is very young (SN: 12/1/01, p. 341). At the time, Advanced Cell Technology of Worcester, Mass., also reported trying--unsuccessfully--to derive such cells from unfertilized Adj. 1. unfertilized - not having been fertilized; "an unfertilized egg" unfertilised, unimpregnated infertile, sterile, unfertile - incapable of reproducing; "an infertile couple" human eggs undergoing a process called parthenogenesis parthenogenesis (pär'thənōjĕn`əsĭs) [Gr.,=virgin birth], in biology, a form of reproduction in which the ovum develops into a new individual without fertilization. . In some animals, that process occurs when eggs begin dividing without the normal input from a sperm cell. In the Feb. 1 Science, scientists for the company and their colleagues at several other institutions report obtaining long-lived stem cells from monkey eggs stimulated to undergo parthenogenesis. Depending on the growth conditions, the stem cells can develop into brain cells, beating heart cells, muscle tissue, and many other cell types, the investigators report. Some birds, insects, and other animals can give birth to healthy animals via parthenogenesis, but mammals can't--their embryos begin to develop but soon die. Consequently, a few bioethicists and scientists have suggested that stems cells derived from parthenogenetic par·the·no·gen·e·sis n. A form of reproduction in which an unfertilized egg develops into a new individual, occurring commonly among insects and certain other arthropods. embryos would avoid some of the moral objections to stem cell stem cell In living organisms, an undifferentiated cell that can produce other cells that eventually make up specialized tissues and organs. There are two major types of stem cells, embryonic and adult. research since they can't produce a viable baby. It remains unclear whether the parthenogenetically derived monkey cells are truly normal and safe for transplantation. --J.T. |
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