12.01.2020 Author: F. William Engdahl
Column: Society
Region: Eastern Asia
Japan has banned gene-edited
human embryos and international scientists are increasing the call to ban the
highly uncertain and risky practice of gene-editing of human DNA. The growing
opposition comes as details of a Chinese biologist’s attempt to gene-edit
embryos to resist HIV led to massive criticism of the flawed experiment. While
the technology of altering DNA of humans, plants, animals is still in its
infancy, the rate at which it is spreading worldwide with little oversight
gives cause for alarm.
In December, 2019 the
Japanese Health Ministry recommended a ban on implanting genetically modified
human embryos. They warned such procedures could lead to a market for ‘designer
babies.’ They follow recommendations of a panel of experts who warned that
allowing gene-edited human embryos to be placed in the uterus for gestation
held very serious health risks for both the infant and for future generations.
In 2018 the Japanese government had moved to permit gene-editing of human embryos.
The latest decision by Japan
to call for a ban on using the gene-edited embryos to give birth to
gene-altered babies is a clear reaction to worldwide protest against a Chinese
biologist who reported he had gene edited twins to be immune to HIV. It was the
first report of babies born who had been genetically edited with CRISPR. Since
then a growing number of scientists have called for a moratorium on gene
editing of humans. Feng Zhang, a member of the Broad Institute of MIT and
Harvard and the co-inventor of CRISPR/Cas9, has called for a moratorium on
gene-edited babies. Nobel laureate David Baltimore said the He human experiment
showed “there has been a failure of self-regulation in the scientific community.”
Human gene experiments
Last December, a full year
after proclaiming their success in creating the first gene edited twins who
were HIV resistant, Chinese biologist He Jiankui, professor at Southern
University of Science and Technology, agreed to release the full details of his
human gene editing experiment. The MIT Technology Review has now published
extensive excerpts from the He document. In November, 2018 He claimed a major
first: to have used the gene editing technology CRISPR to change the DNA of
human embryos during in vitro fertilization using CRISPR gene editing
technology.
The MIT critique is a
devastating condemnation of the scientific procedures of He and his team. After
criticizing He for ignoring ethical and scientific norms in creating the twins
Lula and Nana, allegedly born in late 2018, the MIT journal states, that Prof.
He did not even succeed in reproducing the gene mutation that gives HIV
resistance. Fyodor Urnov, a genome-editing scientist at the University of
California, Berkeley told the MIT Technology Review: “The claim they have
reproduced the prevalent CCR5 variant is a blatant misrepresentation of the
actual data and can only be described by one term: a deliberate falsehood.” In
addition to their deliberate falsehoods, the MIT journal points out that He and
his associates have made it difficult to find the family by deleting the names
of the fertility doctors from their paper and giving a false date of birth. In
short, the human gene editing experiment did not prove what He had claimed and
could have created major biological dangers instead.
Reacting to the international
uproar over He’s radical experiment, Chinese government investigation found He
Jiankui violated state law in pursuit of “personal fame and fortune,”
sentencing He to three years in prison.
In another highly
controversial case involving human gene editing, a team of researchers led by
Prof Juan Carlos Izpisúa Belmonte from the Salk Institute in the USA have
produced monkey-human chimeras in 2017. The report says that the research was
conducted in China “to avoid legal issues.” In December 2019 Chinese scientists
announced they had created pig monkey hybrids as a step to eventually grow
human organs in animals for transplant. “This is the first report of full-term monkey-pig chimeras”, Tang Hai at
the State Key Laboratory of Stem Cell and Reproductive Biology in Beijing told
New Scientist.
The real issue in the
exploding use of gene editing to alter DNA in animals, plants and even humans
is the fact that it is not at all clear how safe it is in the long term. Most
countries including the United States require no special government regulatory
oversight. Recently it was discovered that gene edited mosquitoes intended to
eradicate zika or malaria in Brazil had failed and the mutants had survived.
The genetically engineered mosquitoes produced by the biotech company, Oxitec,
now part of the US company Intrexon, escaped human control after trials in
Brazil and are now spreading in the environment.
Potentially CRISPR
gene-editing technology might enable positive change as well, such as
treatments for genetic diseases; altering the germline of humans, animals, and
other organisms; and modifying the genes of food crops for positive traits. We
don’t know at this point. Yet the degree of unbiased scientific and government
oversight over use of CRISPR is appalling and potentially dangerous. At present
China seems to be making major experiments in gene editing and sees it as a
core part of its biotechnology goals, one of the ten areas of Made in China
2025. At this point China would significantly add to its credibility in terms
of safe research by following the lead of Japan and formally banning gene
editing experiments of humans as a principle of precaution.
F. William
Engdahl is strategic risk consultant and lecturer, he holds a degree
in politics from Princeton University and is a best-selling author on
oil and geopolitics, exclusively for the online magazine “New Eastern Outlook.”
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