Your scribe was giving a talk to a group of doctors in Sydney last night (Tuesday 9th Oct) on "Ethical stem cell science & the Death of Cloning", and on entering the warm and welcoming Irish pub I was informed of the grand news that Shinya Yamanaka had been awarded the Nobel prize for medicine.
The citation did not say it was for slaying the monster of human cloning, or for managing to achieve the good things of stem cell research without even messing with human eggs or creating and killing human embryos. It should have, but the poor lefties in the Nobel committee (remember, the ones who gave the brand new President Obama the Peace Prize for Not Being George Bush) were so averse to appearing to reward ethical stem cell science that they had to give the prize as a double act with some gentleman from the UK who does do cloning.
Never mind. Yamanaka has done something so important for the protection of humanity from the depredations of anti-human science that he should have had the Peace Prize too.
We toasted you in our Sydney pub, Professor, for what you have given to this exciting field of research and - even more so - what you have done to deflect a great harm from our children's generation.
Excerpt from my Quadrant review "Cloning - the Blighted Science":
END OF AN ERA
The scientific
landscape changed suddenly and irrevocably on the 21st November 2007, in what
was described as “an earthquake for both the science and politics of stem cell
research”[i].
On that day the Japanese scientist Shinya Yamanaka published his
breakthrough of iPSC “direct reprogramming”, creating the equivalent of cloned
embryonic stem cells directly from the skin cells of a middle-aged woman,[ii]
bypassing any need for eggs or embryos.
"This is the Holy Grail - to be able to take a few cells from
a patient and then turn them into stem cells in the laboratory," acknowledged
Dr Robert Lanza, a cloning researcher from Advanced Cell Technology in Boston.[iii]
Instead Prof Wilmut is backing direct
reprogramming, the embryo-free route pursued by Prof Yamanaka, which he finds
“100 times more interesting”… as well as “easier to accept socially." [iv]
The other great pioneer of embryo research likewise deferred to
the Yamanaka method. Professor James Thomson, the scientist who first identified
human embryonic stem cells (ESCs) in 1998, published a study on the same day as
Yamanaka confirming that these new stem cells derived from human skin had every
property of stem cells derived from embryos – but none of the ethical and
political baggage.[v]
He told the New York Times it would
not be long “before the stem cell wars are a distant memory”.
“A decade from now, this (controversy)
will be just a funny historical footnote,” Dr Thomson said. More work remains,
but he is confident that the path ahead is clear. "Isn't it great to start
a field and then to end it?"[vi]
This sense that one era had ended and another commenced in stem
cell science was reinforced in a review of the Yamanaka revolution by Professor
Martin Pera. He was formerly director of ESC research at the Australian
National Stem Cell Centre and his article, “Stem
cells: a new year and a new era” was published in Nature in January 2008:[vii]
Manipulating cells from adult human
tissue, scientists have generated cells with the same developmental potential
as embryonic stem cells. The research opportunities these exciting observations
offer are limitless. The generation of induced pluripotent stem cells through
direct reprogramming avoids the difficult ethical controversies surrounding the
use of embryos for deriving stem cells.
The response was everywhere the same: this is marvellous science,
and it gets rid of the social and ethical stress of obtaining eggs and exploiting
embryos. The potential for this development to bypass the central ethical
objection to cloning was recognized by Professor Loane Skene, former Chair of
the Lockhart Review which advised the Australian government in 2005 to permit
cloning. On the day Yamanaka’s iPSC research was published she told ABC radio:
What this does is take away the step
of using the egg and creating the embryo which is particularly ethically
contentious, and it offers the opportunity to get stem cells that are matched
to a particular person. [viii]
In that succinct statement, one of our chief advocates for cloning
reminds us of the goal that cloning failed to reach – getting stem cells that
exactly match the patient – and acknowledges that this new method not only
attains that goal, but is free from ethical concerns.
The new post-cloning era was summed up in January 2008 by a
leading Australian researcher, Dr TJ Martin, Emeritus Professor of Medicine at
the University of Melbourne:
In the past few months the scientific
situation has changed dramatically in ways that should make therapeutic cloning
a historical peculiarity. iPSCs have been shown to have all the properties
previously attributed to embryonic stem cells, and thus provide a means of
preparing individually tailored pluripotent cells without the ethical problems
involved in therapeutic cloning. To this
must be added the fact that iPSCs can readily be prepared, whereas human
therapeutic cloning has never been achieved. If it ever had been, it is such an
inefficient process that it would always have required unacceptably large
numbers of egg donations by women. There is no valid reason for any government
to consider approval of therapeutic cloning that requires nuclear transfer into
human eggs. Indeed, it would be prudent to have the 2006 federal legislation
taken off the books. [ix]
In light of that authoritative summary we should ask the
obvious question: What possible justification is there now for human cloning,
given the success of the iPSC alternative?
Who would take seriously the proposal that I obtain hundreds of eggs
from women (at significant risk to their health) and spend vast amounts of
research money in order to clone you into your identical twin embryo, in order
to obtain pluripotent stem cells that match you genetically (something nobody
has yet managed to achieve) when I could simply take a skin cell from your arm
and obtain the equivalent stem cells easily and ethically using Yamanaka’s direct
reprogramming?
........Likewise, Time
magazine asks whether there is anything left to argue over since Yamanaka’s breakthrough:
No embryos, no eggs, no hand-wringing over where the cells came from and
whether it was ethical to make them in the first place. Yamanaka's and
Thomson's work sidestepped that altogether, raising the tantalizing question:
Is the long-raging stem-cell debate at last over? Yamanaka thinks it might
be. Other giants of the field seem to
agree.[i]
[i] TIME, The Year in Medicine Dec
2007 at http://www.time.com/time/specials/2007/article/0,28804,1685055_1686349,00.html
[i] Rolands J, Centre
for Genetics & Society, Oakland CA at http://sciencenow.sciencemag.org/cgi/content/full/2007/1120/1
[ii] Yamanaka article at
http://www.cell.com/retrieve/pii/S0092867407014717 ; breaking story at
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/11/21/science/21stem.html?_r=2&ref=science&oref=slogin&oref=slogin
[iv] Prof Wilmut on abandoning
cloning at http://www.telegraph.co.uk/science/science-news/3314696/Dolly-creator-Prof-Ian-Wilmut-shuns-cloning.html
[vii] Pera MF. Stem cells. A new
year and a new era. Nature. 2008 Jan 10;451(7175):135-6.
[viii] Prof Loane Skene comments re
Yamanaka at http://www.radioaustralia.net.au/news/stories/s2096987.htm