[Home]  [Headlines]  [Latest Articles]  [Latest Comments]  [Post]  [Sign-in]  [Mail]  [Setup]  [Help] 

Status: Not Logged In; Sign In

I think your EV is charged now. You can go ahead and unplug it.

Gen-Z Can't Answer the Most Basic Questions - OUR EDUCATION SYSTEM IS A JOKE.

Your car is spying on you, but here is how you can stop it.

The Real Reason Why Brigitte Macron Is So Worried...(Candace Owens)

Arsenic tested in food.

For the First Time! Russia Uses Italmas Drones to Attack Ukraine

Leaked Hospital Images Reveal Netanyahu’s TRUE Condition!

First Net-Negative Immigration in Decades

Lefties Losing It: Democrats go from bad to worse

"The Russia hoax is even worse than I thought" Journalist Matt Taibbi on CIA cover-up

Harvard is the Favorite School Red China's Leaders for their Kids

Lefties Losing It: If only there was a sign Hillary suffered from ‘psycho-emotional problems’

Apparently Hulk Hogan has died

10 Economic Facts That Nobody Can Deny

Obama May Be Tried for Treason !!!, 4772

Largest U.S. Power Grid Issues "Max Generation Alert"

Paul Joseph Watson: GO AD FREE This Doesn't End Well

Visualizing Health Insurance As A Share Of Median Income By US State

Emmanuel and Brigitte Macron Sue American Political Commentator Candace Owens

Putin was about to drop a BOMBSHELL on Hillary Clinton, Tulsi Gabbard reveals

The Toxic Combination Of Illinois' Sanctuary Status And The SAFE-T Act

Chinese Mafia Took Over Rural Maine

Adolf Hitler's Final Message to the German People

The 'BIG NEWS O' THE DAY!'

Carl Sagan nailed this prediction of America from 30 years ago

Deeper Dive: $100M FireAid concert funds under scrutiny. Where has the money gone? | FOX 11 LA

Microsoft Says China-Linked Hackers Used Recent Security Exploit In Hacking Spree

Orbán: 20% Of EU's New 7-Year Budget Would Go To Ukraine, 10-12% Goes To Debt Repayments

Pumpkin Seeds Trigger Irreversible Changes in Your Body — Especially After 60

The SUNDA FAULT (Indonesia) Is On The Brink Of A MAGNITUDE 9 Disaster!


Science/Tech
See other Science/Tech Articles

Title: The end of male infertility?
Source: The Independent UK
URL Source: http://news.independent.co.uk/world ... _technology/article1171409.ece
Published: Jul 11, 2006
Author: Maxine Frith, Social Affairs Corresponde
Post Date: 2006-07-11 22:01:27 by Zipporah
Keywords: None
Views: 167
Comments: 1

Scientists have taken a major step forward in the understanding and treatment of male infertility after impregnating mice with sperm grown from embryonic stem cells.

In a world first, researchers have shown that sperm generated from stem cells and developed in a laboratory can result in a live birth.

The breakthrough could lead to infertile men undergoing "sperm transplants" resulting in the birth of their own biological child rather than having to use donated samples, which are in short supply.

Experts described the work as an exciting advance and "hugely significant" for the treatment of male infertility. But some pro-life campaigners expressed concern about the use of "artificial sperm" grown from a discarded embryo rather than a man to create a life.

Professor Karim Nayernia, of Newcastle University, conducted the research - reported yesterday in the journal Developmental Cell - while working in Germany. His team first took stem cells from a mouse blastocyst - an embryo that is a cluster of cells only a few days old. Stem cells are the building blocks of the body and can develop into any type of tissue.

The cells were grown in a laboratory and a marking system was used to identify those that were developing into early-stage sperm cells, known as spermatogonial stem cells.

Scientists had already got that far in research but did not know whether the cells could really "work". The spermatogonial stem cells were monitored in laboratory conditions until they developed into gametes - sperm - a process that took 72 hours.

Professor Nayernia used a version of intracytoplasmic sperm injection (ICSI), a type of fertility treatment used in humans, in which the mouse sperm was injected directly into an egg and implanted into a female mouse.

Of the seven mice born as a result, six developed into adults. But three of the mice had abnormalities, such as being too large or small, and died.

Professor Nayernia said: "The research is particularly important in helping us to understand more about the biological process by which sperm is produced. We must know this if we are to get to the root of infertility."

He added: "If we know more about how spermatogonial stem cells turn into sperm cells, that could be translated into treatments for men whose sperm is dysfunctional. For example, we could isolate a patient's spermatogonial cells using a simple testicular biopsy, encourage them in the laboratory into becoming functional sperm and transplant them back into the patient."

Theoretically, the process also means that a baby could be created without the need for a man or a sperm donor, although current UK law prevents that.

Scientists at Sheffield University have shown human stem cells can develop into the earliest stages of sperm cells but have gone no further than that because of ethical concerns. Professor Harry Moore, an expert in reproductive biology at the University of Sheffield, said: "This latest finding is exciting as it is the first indication that cells produced in this way have the full potential to create an individual." But he warned: "We have to be very cautious about using such techniques in therapies to treat men and women who are infertile until all safety aspects are resolved. That could take years."

The breakthrough is important because scientists still know little about how sperm develops and what causes it to develop problems. Male factor infertility also appears to be on the rise, with more than half of all fertility treatments now performed using ICSI, a procedure designed to help when the problem lies with the man rather than the woman.

Other scientists raised concerns about the ethical implications of the potential to create a child without sperm from an adult man, warning that it could lead down a "slippery slope" to reproductive cloning.

Anna Smajdor, a researcher in medical ethics at Imperial College London, said: "The creation of viable sperm outside the body is a hugely significant breakthrough and offers great potential for stem cell research and fertility treatments. However, sperm and eggs play a unique role in our understanding of kinship and parenthood and being able to create these cells in a laboratory will pose a serious conceptual challenge for our society.

"Who is the father of offspring born from laboratory sperm - a collection of stem cells in a petri dish? The embryo from which these cells were derived? The answers to these questions are not clear but they go to the foundations of our sense of identity."

Josephine Quintavalle, founder of the pro-life lobby group Comment On Reproductive Ethic, said: "I do have concerns about how this would be used in humans. The mice were born with abnormalities and I know a number of scientists who have concerns about using cells like this.

"It is one thing to do this on mice but in humans you are not just using an adult as a guinea pig, you are using the unborn child in the same way too."

Male infertility

* About 40 per cent of fertility problems lie with the man and 20 per cent with both the man and the woman.

* More than half of all fertility treatments now involve intracytoplasmic sperm injection (ICSI), which tends to be used where the problem lies with the man.

* Up to 30 per cent of men are "sub-fertile", meaning they will have some problems conceiving and 2 per cent are totally infertile. Sperm problems account for 75 per cent of male infertility.

* Around 100 to 750 million sperm are ejaculated during orgasm but only a few hundred make it to the fallopian tube where the egg is fertilised.

* Factors affecting sperm count and movement include smoking, obesity, age, excessive heat and genetic problems.

Post Comment   Private Reply   Ignore Thread  


TopPage UpFull ThreadPage DownBottom/Latest

#1. To: Zipporah (#0)

* Factors affecting sperm count and movement include smoking, obesity, age, excessive heat and genetic problems.

Also, quite possibly, all those hormones from birth-control pills that go into the water supply.

"There is no poo here," Sofika said. "There is no smell."

Indrid Cold  posted on  2006-07-11   23:41:10 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


TopPage UpFull ThreadPage DownBottom/Latest


[Home]  [Headlines]  [Latest Articles]  [Latest Comments]  [Post]  [Sign-in]  [Mail]  [Setup]  [Help]