Change of Tide: Former ESC
Researcher Abandons Field For IPSCs
Four of Four
By Wesley J. Smith
This appeared over the
weekend at Mr. Smith’s superb blog:
http://www.firstthings.com/blogs/secondhandsmoke/
The always informative
Michael Cook over at Bioedge notes that a former enthusiast and
participant in ESCR [Embryonic Stem Cell Research] has abandoned
the field to pursue IPSCs [Induced Pluripotent Stem Cells]. From
the Post:
Amongst scientists who
promoted the use of human embryonic stem cells five years ago,
in the middle of passionate debates in the US, Australia and
elsewhere, few were more influential in shaping the ethical
debate than Harvard’s George Q. Daley. “We must support the
vitally important applications of embryonic stem cells to
medical research,” he testified to a Congressional committee in
2005. He contended that work on hESCs was so important that it
could not be delayed…
Now, he has transferred
the same sense of urgency and excitement to an ethical
non-controversial alternative to hESC research which he
dismissed before the committee – induced pluripotent stem cells
(iPS cells). At the time, he said, “Although this strategy is
worth pursuing, it is extremely high-risk, and may take years to
perfect, and may never work as well as nuclear transfer, which
we know we can practice today.” However, in 2007 iPS cells were
developed by Shinya Yamanaka. Professor Daley immediately
stopped campaigning for hESCs. In an interview with Nature
Medicine, he says, “Once Yamanaka solved the problem, I turned
around virtually my entire program to take advantage of that
breakthrough.”
As I always say, good
ethics is also good science. Time will tell, but believe that
IPSCs (or some other ethical approach to obtaining pluripotent
stem cells), along with adult stem cells, will eventually
provide almost every regenerative medical and research benefit
we were once told could only come from ESCR/therapeutic cloning.
[You can read Daley’s
interview with “Nature Medicine” at
www.scribd.com/doc/33819234/George-Q-Daley-interview-with-Nature-Medicine]
Part One
Part Two
Part Three |