UK Wedding News
20/09/2013
The controversial Mitochondrial Replacement (MR) therapy involves replacing the mother's damaged mitochondria by that of a healthy donor. This would effectively create a baby with DNA from three parents, but remove the mother's mutated DNA to prevent the female from passing on the mutations. The mitochondria supply cells with power, but any mutation could result in inherited mitochondrial diseases, ranging from mild learning difficulties to muscular dystrophy and other life-threatening heart, muscle and brain diseases.
Each year one in 200 children in the UK are born with any such mutation and one in 4,000 develops a mitochondrial disease.
MR is a controversial technique because it involves germ line modification of the embryo's DNA. This means that the third party's genetic material will not only be passed on to the child but also to future generations down the female line.
The research team led by Dr Klaus Reinhardt, from the University of Sheffield's Department of Animal and Plant Sciences, in collaboration with Dr Ted Morrow from the University of Sussex and Dr Damian Dowling from Monash University in Australia, compiled evidence that indicates MR can profoundly change the expression of the normal DNA.
A donor's mitochondria may therefore affect a range of important traits such as individual development, cognitive behaviour and key health parameters in the recipient.
Dr Reinhardt explained: "Many combinations of normal DNA and mitochondria don't work so well together. For MR, we need to consider that every person is a different camera. Simply inserting new batteries can lead to complication, even if the donor is perfectly healthy.
"Complications occur more often in males because mitochondria are only passed down from mothers, never from fathers. Any negative effects of mitochondria on a male's DNA can, therefore, never be removed by evolution."
Dr Reinhardt added: "This technology has the potential to allow affected mothers to have healthy babies. Continuing some of the promising research avenues may be an important step towards the safety of this technology."
If proposals regulating the MR procedure pass a public consultation and are approved by Parliament next year, the world's first three-parent baby could be born in Britain by 2015.
(JP/CD)
20/03/2020
LeToya Luckett-Walker Is Pregnant
Charlotte Crosby Finds New Romance
Lydia Bright Gets Candid About Giving Birth
Lana Del Ray Splits From Boyfriend
Angelica Ross Learns Of Boyfriend's Secret Life
Ashley Graham's Breastfeeding Struggle
Susanna Reid's Mother's Day Plans
Lin-Manuel Miranda Homeschooling Kids
Kristen Bell Speaks Of Pride For Daughters
Prince George & Princess Charlotte Now Homeschooled
'Three Parent' IVF Could Pose Risks
A newly proposed IVF treatment, which avoids the risk of passing on inherited defects, could pose some health risks, especially for males, a team of scientists led by the University of Sheffield have claimed.The controversial Mitochondrial Replacement (MR) therapy involves replacing the mother's damaged mitochondria by that of a healthy donor. This would effectively create a baby with DNA from three parents, but remove the mother's mutated DNA to prevent the female from passing on the mutations. The mitochondria supply cells with power, but any mutation could result in inherited mitochondrial diseases, ranging from mild learning difficulties to muscular dystrophy and other life-threatening heart, muscle and brain diseases.
Each year one in 200 children in the UK are born with any such mutation and one in 4,000 develops a mitochondrial disease.
MR is a controversial technique because it involves germ line modification of the embryo's DNA. This means that the third party's genetic material will not only be passed on to the child but also to future generations down the female line.
The research team led by Dr Klaus Reinhardt, from the University of Sheffield's Department of Animal and Plant Sciences, in collaboration with Dr Ted Morrow from the University of Sussex and Dr Damian Dowling from Monash University in Australia, compiled evidence that indicates MR can profoundly change the expression of the normal DNA.
A donor's mitochondria may therefore affect a range of important traits such as individual development, cognitive behaviour and key health parameters in the recipient.
Dr Reinhardt explained: "Many combinations of normal DNA and mitochondria don't work so well together. For MR, we need to consider that every person is a different camera. Simply inserting new batteries can lead to complication, even if the donor is perfectly healthy.
"Complications occur more often in males because mitochondria are only passed down from mothers, never from fathers. Any negative effects of mitochondria on a male's DNA can, therefore, never be removed by evolution."
Dr Reinhardt added: "This technology has the potential to allow affected mothers to have healthy babies. Continuing some of the promising research avenues may be an important step towards the safety of this technology."
If proposals regulating the MR procedure pass a public consultation and are approved by Parliament next year, the world's first three-parent baby could be born in Britain by 2015.
(JP/CD)
Top stories
20/03/2020
LeToya Luckett-Walker Is Pregnant
Charlotte Crosby Finds New Romance
Lydia Bright Gets Candid About Giving Birth
Lana Del Ray Splits From Boyfriend
Angelica Ross Learns Of Boyfriend's Secret Life
Ashley Graham's Breastfeeding Struggle
Susanna Reid's Mother's Day Plans
Lin-Manuel Miranda Homeschooling Kids
Kristen Bell Speaks Of Pride For Daughters
Prince George & Princess Charlotte Now Homeschooled