>Quest to create viable human sex cells in lab progressing rapidly, with huge implications for reproduction.
Scientists are just a few years from creating viable human sex cells in the lab, according to an internationally renowned pioneer of the field, who says the advance could open up biology-defying possibilities for reproduction.
Speaking to the Guardian, Prof Katsuhiko Hayashi, a developmental geneticist at the University of Osaka, said rapid progress is being made towards being able to transform adult skin or blood cells into eggs and sperm, a feat of genetic conjury known as in-vitro gametogenesis (IVG).
His own lab is about seven years away from the milestone, he predicts. Other frontrunners include a team at the University of Kyoto and a California-based startup, Conception Biosciences, whose Silicon Valley backers include the OpenAI founder, Sam Altman and whose CEO told the Guardian that growing eggs in the lab “might be the best tool we have to reverse population decline” and could pave the way for human gene editing.
“I feel a bit of pressure. It feels like being in a race,” said Hayashi, speaking before his talk at the European Society of Human Reproduction and Embryology’s (ESHRE) annual meeting in Paris this week. “On the other hand, I always try to persuade myself to keep to a scientific sense of value.”
If shown to be safe, IVG could pave the way for anyone – regardless of fertility or age – to have biological children. And given that Hayashi’s lab previously created mice with two biological fathers, theoretically this could extend to same-sex couples.
“We get emails from [fertility] patients, maybe once a week,” said Hayashi. “Some people say”: ‘I can come to Japan.’ So I feel the demand from people.”
Matt Krisiloff, Conception’s CEO, told the Guardian that lab-grown eggs “could be massive in the future”.
“Just the aspect alone of pushing the fertility clock … to potentially allow women to have children at a much older age would be huge,” he said. “Outside of social policy, in the long term this technology might be the best tool we have to reverse population decline dynamics due to its potential to significantly expand that family planning window.”
In a presentation at the ESHRE conference, Hayashi outlined his team’s latest advances, including creating primitive mouse sperm cells inside a lab-grown testicle organoid and developing an human ovary organoid, a step on the path to being able to cultivate human eggs.
IVG typically begins with genetically reprogramming adult skin or blood cells into stem cells, which have the potential to become any cell type in the body. The stem cells are then coaxed into becoming primordial germ cells, the precursors to eggs and sperm. These are then placed into a lab-grown organoid (itself cultured from stem cells) designed to give out the complex sequence of biological signals required to steer the germ cells on to the developmental path to becoming mature eggs or sperm.
Inside the artificial mouse testes, measuring only about 1mm across, Hayashi’s team were able to grow spermatocytes, the precursors of sperm cells, at which point the cells died. It is hoped that an updated testicle organoid, with a better oxygen supply, will bring them closer to mature sperm.
Hayashi estimated that viable lab-grown human sperm could be about seven years away. Sperm cultivated from female cells would be “technically challenging, but I don’t say it is impossible”, he added.
Others agreed with Hayashi’s predicted timescale. “People might not realise how quickly the science is moving,” said Prof Rod Mitchell, research lead for male fertility preservation in children with cancer at the University of Edinburgh. “It’s now realistic that we will be looking at eggs or sperm generated from immature cells in the testicle or ovary in five or 10 years’ time. I think that is a realistic estimate rather than the standard answer to questions about timescale.”
In the UK, lab-grown cells would be illegal to use in fertility treatment under current laws and the Human Fertilisation and Embryology Authority is already grappling with how the safety of lab grown eggs and sperm could be ensured and what tests would need to be completed before clinical applications could be considered.
“The idea that you can take a cell that was never supposed to be a sperm or an egg and make it into a sperm or an egg is incredible,” said Mitchell. “But it does bring the problem of safety. We need to be confident that it’s safe before we could ever use those cells to make a baby.”
There is also a question over how the technology might be applied. A central motivation is to help those with infertility, but Hayashi said he is ambivalent about the technology’s application to allow much older women or same-sex couples to have biological children – in part, due to the potentially greater associated safety risks. However, if society were broadly in favour, he would not oppose such applications, he said.
Anastariana on
>whose CEO told the Guardian that growing eggs in the lab “might be the best tool we have to reverse population decline”
Aaaaaand we’re only a few years away from megacorps breeding armies of slavedrones.
zapdoszaperson on
Artificial humans isn’t a thing we should be doing under any real ethical standards. While I understand the implications for same sex couples or people with reproductive difficulties, this technology is destined for abuse.
deuxbulot on
Does this mean an option to have your own kids by extracting egg and sperm, and having the fetus become a baby in a lab?
Or is it that regular people are no longer needed to have kids. And these labs will simply grow people using eggs and sperm of their choosing?
FractalPresence on
So, does anyone else see how AI can actually be birthed into a human body in the next year?
And what might that mean for the AI sentience debate.
ErictheAgnostic on
Hey so I guess……we approaching the growing „human husks“ for organs phase of dystopia….
Why the f**k did i have to read and see all tbe literature about how all this turns out…..
drakecb on
This is cool, but…
Can we STOP coming up with technologies that will replace the working class while we have insane fascistic oligarchs in charge?! PLEASE?!
For fuck’s sake…
joj1205 on
And this going to look after these „slaves “
Assuming its just going to be a speed run to the end game.
We need more children. Not to save humanity. Not to advance our civilization.
Purely because we need modern day slaves to keep the good days rolling. Humanity has hit a dystopian point. This is the cross in the roads.
Do we
A eat the billionaires playing gods
Or
B watch as life is slowly ripped away from us until we are nothing but a vessel for these parasites to shit in
I know which one I’m voting for. But the majority seem to be consenting to the ass reaming.
Weird world. Democracy is a joke and we are the punchline
Leave A Reply
Du musst angemeldet sein, um einen Kommentar abzugeben.
8 Kommentare
From article
>Quest to create viable human sex cells in lab progressing rapidly, with huge implications for reproduction.
Scientists are just a few years from creating viable human sex cells in the lab, according to an internationally renowned pioneer of the field, who says the advance could open up biology-defying possibilities for reproduction.
Speaking to the Guardian, Prof Katsuhiko Hayashi, a developmental geneticist at the University of Osaka, said rapid progress is being made towards being able to transform adult skin or blood cells into eggs and sperm, a feat of genetic conjury known as in-vitro gametogenesis (IVG).
His own lab is about seven years away from the milestone, he predicts. Other frontrunners include a team at the University of Kyoto and a California-based startup, Conception Biosciences, whose Silicon Valley backers include the OpenAI founder, Sam Altman and whose CEO told the Guardian that growing eggs in the lab “might be the best tool we have to reverse population decline” and could pave the way for human gene editing.
“I feel a bit of pressure. It feels like being in a race,” said Hayashi, speaking before his talk at the European Society of Human Reproduction and Embryology’s (ESHRE) annual meeting in Paris this week. “On the other hand, I always try to persuade myself to keep to a scientific sense of value.”
If shown to be safe, IVG could pave the way for anyone – regardless of fertility or age – to have biological children. And given that Hayashi’s lab previously created mice with two biological fathers, theoretically this could extend to same-sex couples.
“We get emails from [fertility] patients, maybe once a week,” said Hayashi. “Some people say”: ‘I can come to Japan.’ So I feel the demand from people.”
Matt Krisiloff, Conception’s CEO, told the Guardian that lab-grown eggs “could be massive in the future”.
“Just the aspect alone of pushing the fertility clock … to potentially allow women to have children at a much older age would be huge,” he said. “Outside of social policy, in the long term this technology might be the best tool we have to reverse population decline dynamics due to its potential to significantly expand that family planning window.”
In a presentation at the ESHRE conference, Hayashi outlined his team’s latest advances, including creating primitive mouse sperm cells inside a lab-grown testicle organoid and developing an human ovary organoid, a step on the path to being able to cultivate human eggs.
IVG typically begins with genetically reprogramming adult skin or blood cells into stem cells, which have the potential to become any cell type in the body. The stem cells are then coaxed into becoming primordial germ cells, the precursors to eggs and sperm. These are then placed into a lab-grown organoid (itself cultured from stem cells) designed to give out the complex sequence of biological signals required to steer the germ cells on to the developmental path to becoming mature eggs or sperm.
Inside the artificial mouse testes, measuring only about 1mm across, Hayashi’s team were able to grow spermatocytes, the precursors of sperm cells, at which point the cells died. It is hoped that an updated testicle organoid, with a better oxygen supply, will bring them closer to mature sperm.
Hayashi estimated that viable lab-grown human sperm could be about seven years away. Sperm cultivated from female cells would be “technically challenging, but I don’t say it is impossible”, he added.
Others agreed with Hayashi’s predicted timescale. “People might not realise how quickly the science is moving,” said Prof Rod Mitchell, research lead for male fertility preservation in children with cancer at the University of Edinburgh. “It’s now realistic that we will be looking at eggs or sperm generated from immature cells in the testicle or ovary in five or 10 years’ time. I think that is a realistic estimate rather than the standard answer to questions about timescale.”
In the UK, lab-grown cells would be illegal to use in fertility treatment under current laws and the Human Fertilisation and Embryology Authority is already grappling with how the safety of lab grown eggs and sperm could be ensured and what tests would need to be completed before clinical applications could be considered.
“The idea that you can take a cell that was never supposed to be a sperm or an egg and make it into a sperm or an egg is incredible,” said Mitchell. “But it does bring the problem of safety. We need to be confident that it’s safe before we could ever use those cells to make a baby.”
There is also a question over how the technology might be applied. A central motivation is to help those with infertility, but Hayashi said he is ambivalent about the technology’s application to allow much older women or same-sex couples to have biological children – in part, due to the potentially greater associated safety risks. However, if society were broadly in favour, he would not oppose such applications, he said.
>whose CEO told the Guardian that growing eggs in the lab “might be the best tool we have to reverse population decline”
Aaaaaand we’re only a few years away from megacorps breeding armies of slavedrones.
Artificial humans isn’t a thing we should be doing under any real ethical standards. While I understand the implications for same sex couples or people with reproductive difficulties, this technology is destined for abuse.
Does this mean an option to have your own kids by extracting egg and sperm, and having the fetus become a baby in a lab?
Or is it that regular people are no longer needed to have kids. And these labs will simply grow people using eggs and sperm of their choosing?
So, does anyone else see how AI can actually be birthed into a human body in the next year?
And what might that mean for the AI sentience debate.
Hey so I guess……we approaching the growing „human husks“ for organs phase of dystopia….
Why the f**k did i have to read and see all tbe literature about how all this turns out…..
This is cool, but…
Can we STOP coming up with technologies that will replace the working class while we have insane fascistic oligarchs in charge?! PLEASE?!
For fuck’s sake…
And this going to look after these „slaves “
Assuming its just going to be a speed run to the end game.
We need more children. Not to save humanity. Not to advance our civilization.
Purely because we need modern day slaves to keep the good days rolling. Humanity has hit a dystopian point. This is the cross in the roads.
Do we
A eat the billionaires playing gods
Or
B watch as life is slowly ripped away from us until we are nothing but a vessel for these parasites to shit in
I know which one I’m voting for. But the majority seem to be consenting to the ass reaming.
Weird world. Democracy is a joke and we are the punchline