Australian Science Illustrated – Issue 51 2017

(Ben Green) #1
38 | SCIENCE ILLUSTRATED

A cross section of the four-week-old embryo heart
shows that the heart is made up of both pig cells
(blue) and human cells (green).

Gene-spliced Pig


Will Grow a Copy


of Your Heart


In a ground-breaking experiment, scientists have managed
to include cells from a human in the heart of a pig embryo.
The next step will be growing an entire heart, which is only
made up of cells from the patient who needs the heart.

1


A fertilised egg cell from a
pig loses a gene, which is
normally crucial to the pig
developing its own heart. The
editing is carried out using the
new CRISPR-Cas9 tool.

2


Skin cells from the patient,
who needs a new heart, are
re-programmed into stem
cells using substances, which change
the expression of the cells' genes.

3


When the egg cell from the
pig has developed into an
early embryo without any
organs, the patient's stem cells are
injected into the embryo.

STEM CELLS
ARE INJECTED.

CELLS FROM A
HUMAN BEING

EGG CELL

SKIN CELLS

SKIN CELLS CONVERTED INTO
STEM CELLS

EARLY PIG EMBRYO

F


our weeks have passed since the
pig embryos were implanted, and
the air is heavy with excitement
in the American lab. The
scientists are so close to
completing their breakthrough project that
they can almost taste the sensation. Finally,
the fragile pig embryos have been removed
from their surrogate mothers and placed
under the microscopes. The hopeful
scientists are only looking for one thing in the
tiny embryos: human cells.
Biologist Juan Carlos Belmonte and his
team of scientists from the Salk Institute in La
Jolla, California, are the first to have produced
cross-breeds between pigs and humans.
Human stem cells were injected into pig
embryos, before the embryos were inserted
into the wombs of adult pigs. Four weeks later,
the human cells had become integral parts of
the growing pig embryos. Scientists now aim
to combine the method with sophisticated
gene technology to grow human organs in pigs
and reduce the short-age of donor organs.

FORCED TO MAKE ODD EXPERIMENTS
There is a critical shortage of donor organs
throughout the world. Waiting lists have
sextupled during the past few decades, and
about 60 % of the patients who are waiting
for a new organ die as they do so. Scientists
have struggled to find a solution for decades.
In the 1960s, 13 desperate patients had
chimp kidneys implanted, and though only
one single patient survived for more than a
few months, the experiments promised that
the method might work one day.
Later, different organs from monkeys and
pigs were transplanted into humans with
limited success. The major challenge is the

FROM HUMAN

FROM PIG

SALK INSTITUTE

GENE EDITING
TOOL INJECTED

HUMANS ORGANS
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