Skip to main content

Synthetic mouse embryo develops beating heart

 By Philippa Roxby

Health reporter (BBC),

Edited by Amal Udawatta,
Natural and synthetic embryos side by side show comparable brain and heart formation.IMAGE SOURCE,AMADEI AND HANDFORD
Image caption,
The synthetic embryo shows comparable brain and heart formation, scientists say

Scientists in Cambridge have created synthetic mouse embryos in a lab, without using eggs or sperm, which show evidence of a brain and beating heart.

The mouse embryos, developed using stem cells, only lasted for eight days.

But the research team say it could improve understanding of the earliest stages of organ development - and why some pregnancies fail.

Other scientists caution that while the technique is promising there are still many hurdles to overcome.

The researchers from the University of Cambridge and the California Institute of Technology (Caltech) are the latest to publish their results in the journal Nature.

The Cambridge team has been studying the early stages of pregnancy for the past decade but so much of it is hidden from view in the womb.

By mimicking natural processes in a laboratory, they found a way to get three types of stem cells from mice to interact and grow into embryo-like structures.

The synthetic mouse embryos only lasted for eight days, due to defects - but they reached the point where a brain began to develop.

Professor Magdalena Zernicka-Goetz, professor of mammalian development and stem cell biology at Cambridge and professor of biology at Caltech, said it was "a dream come true" and could offer a glimpse into how organs are formed.

Natural and synthetic embryos side by side show comparable brain and heart formation.IMAGE SOURCE,AMADEI AND HANDFORD
Image caption,
Side by side, the natural and synthetic mouse embryos looked very similar after eight days

"This period of human life is so mysterious, so to be able to see how it happens in a dish - to have access to these individual stem cells, to understand why so many pregnancies fail and how we might be able to prevent that from happening - is quite special," she said.

The advance could also mean less reliance on animals for research and a useful way to test new drugs.

'Very early stage'

However, Prof Alfonso Martinez Arias, from the Universitat Pompeu Fabra in Barcelona, said: "This is an advance but at a very early stage of development, a rare event which, while superficially looking like an embryo, bears defects which should not be overlooked."

The researchers now plan to work on keeping the synthetic embryos developing for a day or two longer, which is difficult to do without creating a synthetic placenta.

Eventually, their ambition is to develop similar embryos from human stem cells - but this is still a long way off, and ethically much more complicated.

At present, UK law permits human embryos to be studied in the laboratory only up to the fourteenth day of development, but there are no rules around synthetic embryos.

Prof Robin Lovell-Badge, from the Francis Crick Institute, said that should change.

"Given the similarity with real embryos, it follows that consideration also needs to be given as to whether and how such integrated stem cell-based embryo models should be regulated," he said.

He added that it was important not to think of the embryo-like models "as being the real thing - even if they are getting close".

"If these had been derived from human stem cells, and it is accepted that these should never be transplanted into a uterus, we will never know if they are equivalent."

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Why did Homo sapiens outlast all other human species?

  From - Live Science By  Mindy Weisberger Edited by - Amal Udawatta Reproductions of skulls from a Neanderthal (left), Homo sapiens (middle) and Australopithecus afarensis (right)   (Image credit: WHPics, Paul Campbell, and Attie Gerber via Getty Images; collage by Marilyn Perkins) Modern humans ( Homo sapiens ) are the sole surviving representatives of the  human family tree , but we're the last sentence in an evolutionary story that began approximately 6 million years ago and spawned at least 18 species known collectively as hominins.  There were at least nine  Homo  species — including  H. sapiens  —  distributed around Africa, Europe and Asia by about 300,000 years ago, according to the Smithsonian's  National Museum of Nat ural History  in Washington, D.C. One by one, all except  H. sapiens  disappeared.  Neanderthals  and a  Homo  group known as the  Denisovans  lived alongside...

New Zealand loses first naval ship to sea since WW2

  Aleks Phillips   BBC New  ,   Michael Bristow,    BBC World Service Edited by - Amal Udawatta US Navy HMNZS Manawanui capsized after running aground off the coast of Samoa The Royal New Zealand Navy has lost its first ship to the sea since World War Two, after one of its vessels ran aground off the coast of Samoa. HMNZS Manawanui, a specialist diving and ocean imaging ship, came into trouble about one nautical mile from the island of Upolu on Saturday night local time, while conducting a survey of a reef. It later caught fire before capsizing. All 75 people on board were evacuated onto lifeboats and rescued early on Sunday, New Zealand's Defence Force said in a statement. Officials said the cause of the grounding was unknown and will be investigated. Reuters All 75 people on board have now safely been rescued The incident occurred during a bout of rough and windy weather. Military officials said rescuers "battled" currents and winds that pushed ...

A Bubbly Origin for Odd Radio Circles

   From- Sky & Te;escope  By - Aas Nova  Edited by - Amal Udawatta A radio image of the first odd radio circle to be discovered, ORC-1, with a visible-light image of stars and galaxies forming the background. Jayanne English (U. Manitoba), EMU (ASKAP/CSIRO), MeerKAT, DES (CTIO) Discovered in 2019, odd radio circles (ORCs) are among the newest and most mysterious astrophysical phenomena. New research examines how bubbles blown by black hole jets could create these striking features. ============================================== Stumped by Space ORCs ORCs are faint extragalactic circles of radio emission that appear to be invisible at other wavelengths. As the number of known ORCs slowly climbs, researchers have begun to test possible formation mechanisms. Among the many possibilities are the jets of active galactic nuclei: luminous galactic centers powered by accreting supermassive  black holes. In this hypothesis, active galactic nucleus jets filled with fa...