Friday February 17, 2012

Japanese scientists create world's first transgenic monkeys

PARIS —

In a controversial achievement, Japanese scientists announced on Wednesday they had created the world’s first transgenic primates, breeding monkeys with a gene that made the animals’ skin glow a fluorescent green.

The exploit opens up exciting prospects for medical researchers, they said.

It could eventually lead to lab monkeys that replicate some of humanity’s most devastating diseases, providing a new model for exploring how these disorders are caused and how they may be cured.

“Great advances in pre-clinical research can be expected using these models,” the team said.

But other voices warned of a potential ethics storm, brewed by fears that technology used on our closest animal relatives could be turned to create genetically-engineered humans.

In a study published in the British journal Nature, a team led by Erika Sasaki of the Central Institute for Experimental Animals at Keio University reported on experiments on common marmosets (Callithrix jacchus), a small monkey native to Brazil.

They introduced a foreign gene, tucked inside a virus, into marmoset embryos that were then nurtured in a bath of sucrose.

The gene codes for green fluorescent protein (GFP), a substance that was originally isolated from a jellyfish and is now commonly used as a biotech marker. An animal tagged with GFP glows green when exposed to ultraviolet light, proving that a key gene sequence has been switched on.

The transgenic embryos were then implanted in the uterus of seven surrogate mother marmosets.

Three of recipients miscarried. The other four gave birth to five offspring, all of which carried the GFP gene.

In two of these five, the GFP gene had been incorporated into the reproductive cells. A second generation of marmosets was then derived from one of the two.

The work is important, because medical researchers have hankered for an animal model that is closer to the human anatomy than rodents.

Mice and rats, genetically engineered to have the symptoms of certain human diseases, are the mainstay of pre-clinical lab work, in which scientists test their theories before trying out any outcome on human volunteers.

But many disorders, especially neurological diseases such as Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s, are so complex that they cannot be reproduced meaningfully in rodents because their biology is different.

Hopes for a non-human primate model have until now been dashed by the failure to insert a gene into a monkey’s sperm and eggs—the “germline” that ensures that the inserted DNA is passed on to future generations rather than lost.

The first genetically-modified monkey was born in 2000. Known as ANDi (the initials of “Inserted DNA,” spelt backwards), the rhesus carried the GFP gene but not in its reproductive cells.

The latest exploit thus opens up hopes of eventually breeding colonies of transgenic primates with inherited traits that closely replicate human disease.

“This is the first case ever established in the world that an introduced gene was successfully inherited (by) the next generation in primates,” the researchers said in a press relase.

Future plans include creating transgenic marmosets that replicate human diseases such as Parkinson’s and amyotrophic lateral sclerosis.

In a commentary also published by Nature, Gerald Schatten and Shoukhrat Mitalipov, primate research specialists in the US, praised the achievement as “undoubtedly a milestone” but sounded caution.

They said marmosets were not as useful as baboons or rhesus monkeys in replicating some diseases, notably HIV and tuberculosis.

Another question was the random insertion of a foreign gene in the monkey’s genetic code. This may have caused some of the miscarriages and, if previous research is a guide, could unleash cancer.

Scientists also have to address legitimate public concern about animal welfare and the need for “realistic policies” to prevent genetically-engineered babies, they warned.

“There are many unanswered questions,” Helen Wallace, of GeneWatch UK, a British NGO that monitors the ethics of gene research, said.

“It’s a big step from making a fluorescent green marmoset to making a marmoset that replicates a human disease, it’s a much more complicated thing to do.

“There’s also a very important ethical debate, firstly about the animals themselves and secondly about what this might lead to in the future, whether it might be ethically justified to genetically engineer humans.”

Wire reports

  • 0

    franz75

    fluorescent skin are so 80's...

  • 0

    ebisen

    this so smells like a Nobel price being awarded 10 years from now...

  • 0

    cleo

    this so smells like a Nobel price....

    In other words, vivisection stinks.

    The men in white coats infect, mutilate, torture and kill millions of rats and mice because it's 'necessary', then when the next model comes along they tell us all those rodent trials were useless because rodents aren't primates. In a few years' time, when millions of green glowing marmosets have been sacrificed to the god of scientific research grants, they'll 'discover' that marmosets aren't close enough to humans and all the experiments need to be repeated on green glowing higher primates. The article points out that some scientists are already muttering. And all the time the real guinea pigs are the first humans their treatments are tried out on.

  • 0

    ultradodgy

    Sorry Cleo, glowing green space monkeys are totally cool.

  • 0

    dennis0bauer

    soon to be seen JTV? cute glowing monkees?

  • 0

    Nessie

    How long for an army of them to randomly type the complete fluorescent works of Shakespeare?

  • 0

    ebisen

    cleo - next time you take some medicine or use cosmetics (any of them actually) - go and thank all those dead mice who died for saving human lives. I can assure you their death wasn't in vain...

  • 0

    Noripinhead

    These guys should watch "Planet of the Apes" again to see how it feels from the other side. The humans were on the ones getting the experimental injections from the apes.

  • 0

    cnc

    I can forsee a future where teenagers will be throwing up their flourescent arms up in the air on the call of the techno DJ.

  • 0

    sharky1

    Hey....I think it would be cool to have a green glow after a day of charging up at the beach,,,

  • 0

    Fadamor

    Sharky1, standing out in the sun all day "charging up" won't work though your skin would be glowing while the sun's UV rays were hitting you. You need a "black light" to see the glow indoors.

    I can see it now... Yakuza getting translucent tattoos so that the "tats" can glow in a nightclub's black light. Why was the Yakuza glowing? Because he was injected with the virus after a law was passed stating that all convicted criminals must get the genetic marker that causes them to glow under black light. The number of convicted criminals passing through security checkpoints could be swiftly counted simply by placing a black light next to the security gate. This method worked well until teenagers got ahold of the genetic marker virus and infected themselves for the cool party effects. Government officials subsequently declared the marking of convicts a waste of time.

  • 0

    dontpanic

    "go and thank all those dead mice who died for saving human lives"

    Dont like vivisection but accept its sometimes essential, however this is Moreauesque. Genetically altering animals to entertain diseases is immoral.

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