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China clones monkeys in sleep research

January 24, 2019

Chinese scientists have made five clones of a gene-edited monkey in a bid to expand testing on human diseases. But the milestone coudl also raise fresh concerns about genetic engineering in humans.

https://p.dw.com/p/3C5Pe
China geklonte Affen
Image: picture alliance/AP Photo/Jin Liwang

Chinese scientists genetically engineered a monkey to induce a sleep disorder and then successfully cloned the animal five times, Chinese state media reported Thursday. It is the first time multiple clones have been made from a gene-edited monkey for biomedical purposes. 

The experiment could expand the scope of human disease testing, with the scientists saying that their work will help further research into finding potential cures for sleep disorders in humans, which is linked to depression and neurodegenerative diseases.

However,  the case is expected to raise fresh concerns over the ethical boundaries of medical research. 

The work was in line with international ethical standards for animal research, state media reported. 

The announcement of the monkey editing and cloning follows a global controversy over a secret experiment by a Chinese scientist that lead to the world's first gene-edited baby.

First edited, then cloned

Two articles, published in the National Science Review journal, detail the sets of research conducted by scientists at the Chinese Academy of Sciences in Shanghai.

Sinogene  China Hunde Klon
Image: Reuters/T. Peter

The first deals with the genetic editing of a macaque monkey to disrupt its circadian rhythm — biological cycles which govern all living things and decide when we sleep, wake up and eat.

Scientists used the CRISPR-Cas9 method to cut out individual genes and modify the monkey to replicate the psychological conditions associated with sleep disorders and depression. The breakthrough means more research can be done into these types of human disorders.

The second deals with the cloning of said gene-edited monkey. The Chinese scientists used a somatic cell nuclear transfer, the same cloning method that gave birth to Dolly the sheep in the 1990s.  Scientists have also applied this technique in stem cell cloning before in the hopes of treating conditions like multiple sclerosis and blindness.

Read moreJapanese researchers grow skin and hair using reprogrammed stem cells

Klonschaf Dolly
Image: picture-alliance/AP

This latest experiment took place at China's new brain science research park,launched last year in Shanghai by the Chinese Academy of Sciences's Institute of Neuroscience and local government.

nn/cmb (dpa, Reuters)