Sign In
New User? Register
scienceclubofindia · SCIENCE club of INDIA - For Development of Sciences in India By Dr. Bhudia
? Already a member? Sign in to Yahoo!

Yahoo! Groups Tips

Did you know...
You can search the group for older messages.

Messages

  Messages Help
Advanced
Stem cell finding offers IVF hope http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/health/   Message List  
Reply | Forward Message #355 of 601 |
Dear medicos, Docs and friends of science,

Stem cell finding offers IVF hope http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/health/4104680.stm
Lab-grown sperm may be a possibility in the future

British scientists say they have taken a step towards showing human eggs and
sperm can be created from stem cells.
The finding may help IVF treatment, hit by a shortage of egg and sperm donors.
Sheffield researchers told a European fertility conference they had shown
embryonic stem cells could develop into the earliest stages of eggs and sperm.
In principle, this means it may be possible to clone stem cells from an
infertile patient and turn these into the required sperm or eggs for IVF. In
their study of the human embryos, the Sheffield University team were following
the same principle that had previously been observed in studies of stem cells
taken from mice. They found that some of the human cells developed the genetic
signature of primordial germ cells, the ancestors of eggs and sperm.

The work, presented at the European Society of Human Reproduction and Embryology
conference in Copenhagen, may one day compensate for a shortage of egg and sperm
donors for IVF treatment. This lack has led to the growing trend of fertility
tourism - couples seeking help abroad. The Sheffield researchers say many more
tests are needed to check the technique is safe.Typically, sperm banks have
relied on donations from younger men in their 20s, targeted through football
programmes, magazines and student unions. Egg donation is more intrusive and
riskier, making it more difficult to recruit donors. But numbers of both donors
have been dwindling. Some say that laws lifting anonymity on donations from 1
April this year might put off even more potential donors.

Sperm production

The team at the Centre for Stem Cell Biology in Sheffield used stem cells taken
from embryos donated for research by couples undergoing IVF. They found some
formed into a collection of cells called embryoid bodies. When they looked at
these cells in detail they found that within two weeks a small number of cells
expressing some of the genes found in human primordial germ cells were present.
Some cells also expressed proteins only found in maturing sperm. Mr Behrouz
Alfatoonian, one of the team which carried out the study, said: "This suggests
that human stem cells may have the ability to develop into primordial germ cells
and early gametes as has been shown previously for mouse embryonic stem cells."
He said the challenge now was to choose the cells that were going to develop
into primordial germ cells and then work out how to encourage them to grow into
mature sperm and egg. "Producing functional gametes is much more difficult
because we have to recreate for the cultured cells the environment of the
developing follicle for the egg or the tissue of the testis for the sperm," he
said.

'Fantastic news'

Professor Harry Moore, who runs the centre, said the research meant it might
ultimately be possible to produce sperm and eggs to use in assisted conception
treatments. British Fertility Society secretary Dr Allan Pacey called the
research an "exciting step forward that has huge implications for the way we
could undertake research studies to investigate the processes of egg and sperm
development. "We still don't really understand why some men and women can't
produce sperm and eggs of their own, and sadly for them that leads to
infertility. "But if we could better understand the basic biology then we might
be in a better position to help them one day." Laura Witjens of the National
Gamete Donation Trust said: "Donation has gone down over the last eight or nine
years. "Any research that could ultimately help patients requiring egg or sperm
is fantastic news."

Clare Brown, of Infertility Network UK, said: "Although this is good news for
couples who cannot produce their own sperm or eggs there is a lot of work still
to be done before it can be used in fertility treatment." However, the charity
Life said the work was less about helping infertile couples to have children
than about helping to solve the acute shortage of eggs and sperm needed for
human cloning and embryonic stem cell research. Spokesman Matthew O'Gorman said:
"Just because something may be possible does not mean that it is ethical.
"Destructive research on human embryos erodes respect for the value of human
life and must be stopped."



Forwarded by YOURS Dr.BHUDIA-Science Group Of INDIA.
http://uk.groups.yahoo.com/group/venustransit_2004/
President:"Kutch Science Foundation".
Founder :"Kutch Amateurs Astronomers Club - Bhuj - Kutch".
Life Member:"kutch Itihaas Parishad".
kutchscience@..., kutchscience@...,
http://uk.geocities.com/wildlifeofkutch/
http://www.geocities.com/kutchscience
http://profiles.yahoo.com/kutchscience2000
http://in.groups.yahoo.com/group/scienceclubofindia
http://in.groups.yahoo.com/group/kutchscience
http://in.groups.yahoo.com/group/kachchh
http://in.groups.yahoo.com/group/bhuj

Do visit our ABOVE Clubs/Groups of Science Groups of India.



[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]




Tue Jul 11, 2006 9:56 am

wildkutch
Offline Offline
Send Email Send Email

Forward
Message #355 of 601 |
Expand Messages Author Sort by Date

Dear medicos, Docs and friends of science, Stem cell finding offers IVF hope http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/health/4104680.stm Lab-grown sperm may be a possibility...
KutchScience
wildkutch
Offline Send Email
Jul 11, 2006
10:14 am
Advanced

Copyright © 2009 Yahoo! Inc. All rights reserved.
Privacy Policy - Terms of Service - Guidelines - Help