Scientists Use In-Vitro Fertilization to Create Unborn Baby With Three Parents
London, England (LifeNews.com) -- Scientists in England can increasingly be counted on to advance the kind of mad science that used to be confined to substandard sci-fi flicks on late-night television. After cloning animals and creating human-animal chimeras, scientists in Britain have created a human embryo through in-vitro fertilization who has three parents.
A team from Newcastle University say they made the unborn child from DNA from a man and two women.
They say the discovery could result in eliminating hereditary diseases such as epilepsy by ensuring that women don't pass on DNA defects to their children.
The idea targets problems with the mitochondria of DNA cells that is responsible for passing along some forms of disease to children such as liver failure, blindness, muscular dystrophy, diabetes and deafness.
According to a BBC report, the Newcastle scientists exchanged the mitochondria of cells from one woman with that of another.
The news station indicated the team used 10 human embryos from fertility clinics for their experiments, meaning all ten of the human beings were killed for their research project.
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