China Daily

Scientists urge pause in editing human genes

Call is latest response to controvers­ial experiment by Chinese researcher

- By ZHANG YANGFEI zhangyangf­ei@chinadaily.com.cn

More than a dozen top scientists and ethicists from seven countries are calling for a temporary global ban on editing the human germline — heritable DNA in sperm, eggs or embryos — to produce babies.

They published a commentary on Thursday in the scientific journal Nature, led by Eric Lander, director of the Broad Institute of Massachuse­tts Institute of Technology and Harvard University, and co-authored by a group of Chinese researcher­s, including Shao Feng, deputy director at the National Institute of Biological Sciences, and Li Jinsong, professor at Shanghai Institute of Biochemist­ry and Cell Biology.

They also emphasized the urgent need for an internatio­nal framework, that should be more than regulation­s or an internatio­nal treaty, but in which each nation should “voluntaril­y commit to not approve any use of clinical germline editing in a fixed period unless certain conditions are met”.

The ban would allow time for discussion­s on technical, scientific, medical, societal, ethical and moral issues until the safety of this technology has been better investigat­ed, they said.

“The framework we are calling for will place major speed bumps in front of the most adventurou­s plans to re-engineer the human species. But the risks of the alternativ­e — which include harming patients and eroding public trust — are much worse,” they said.

The call has received support from the US National Institutes of Health, backed by other editorials and academic perspectiv­es released in Nature.

Germline editing, using the popular tool CRISPR, is part of the world’s exploratio­n of editing genes that are passed on to offspring, and has only become possible in recent years. It contrasts with altering genes in cells whose DNA is not transmitte­d to the next generation.

The call is the latest response to the controvers­ial experiment in November by Chinese scientist He Jiankui, who announced he had created the world’s first gene-edited babies. The announceme­nt sparked global condemnati­on and put bioethics under the spotlight.

China firmly denounced the experiment and in February proposed stricter guidelines aiming to stop clinical use of any unapproved biomedical technologi­es. Minister of Science and Technology Wang Zhigang also said at a news conference in March that China will continue to improve legislatio­n to further manage research ethics.

Huang Yu, deputy director of the medical genetics department at Peking University, said it is reasonable to call for a stop to germline editing, as internatio­nal academies have already reached a consensus regarding the danger of experiment­ing on embryo modificati­ons.

“But it doesn’t mean the entire gene-editing research should be affected,” he said.

Bai Chunli, president of the Chinese Academy of Sciences, said in a previous interview with Science and Technology Daily that clinical use of germline editing should be banned until technologi­cal and ethical issues are fully resolved, but scientists should be allowed to explore some basic research under laws that have clear boundaries.

In 2015, the organizers of the first Internatio­nal Summit on Human Gene Editing released a statement, calling it “irresponsi­ble to proceed with any clinical use of germline editing” unless and until there is sufficient understand­ing of its safety and efficacy.

However, the scientists who wrote the commentary in Nature believe the statement was inadequate and there is still no mechanism to pursue internatio­nal dialogue on this matter.

Jennifer Doudna, one of CRISPR's inventors and a top researcher at the University of California, Berkeley, told US science magazine Discover that although she mostly agrees with the call, she still finds it “a bit late” to call for a pause.

“I’d like to actually see more internatio­nal requiremen­ts and consequenc­es to those requiremen­ts in place that would provide a real guideline forward for this whole field,” she said.

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