December 12, 2022

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Report calls for improved oversight on chimeric human-animal research

Credit: Pixabay/CC0 Public Domain
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Credit: Pixabay/CC0 Public Domain

A new report on the ethics of crossing species boundaries by inserting human cells into nonhuman animals—research surrounded by debate—makes recommendations clarifying the ethical issues and calling for improved oversight of this work.

The report was developed by an interdisciplinary team. Principal investigators are Josephine Johnston and Karen Maschke, research scholars at The Hastings Center, and Insoo Hyun, director of the Center for Life Sciences and Public Learning at the Museum of Life Sciences in Boston, formerly of Case Western Reserve University.

Advances in human stem cell science and gene editing enable scientists to insert more extensively and precisely into , creating "chimeric" animals, embryos, and other organisms that contain a mix of human and nonhuman cells.

Many people hope that this research will yield enormous benefits, including better models of human disease, inexpensive sources of human eggs and embryos for research, and sources of tissues and organs suitable for transplantation into humans.

But there are about this type of research, which raise questions such as whether the moral status of nonhuman animals is altered by the insertion of human stem cells, whether these studies should be subject to additional prohibitions or oversight, and whether this kind of research should be done at all.

The report found that:

The research is published in the journal Hastings Center Report.

More information: Josephine Johnston et al, Clarifying the Ethics and Oversight of Chimeric Research, Hastings Center Report (2022). DOI: 10.1002/hast.1427

Journal information: Hastings Center Report

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