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Scientists create human embryo models without sperm or egg

  • Researchers in Israel have grown human ‘embryo models’ in a lab from stem cells
  • Advance could help unlock secrets about the precarious early stages of pregnancies

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Scientists have used stem cells to create structures that resemble human embryos in the lab. File photo: Shutterstock

Scientists have developed human embryo-like structures without using sperm, an egg or fertilisation, offering hope for research on miscarriage and birth defects but also raising fresh ethical concerns.

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Earlier this year, several labs around the world released preprint studies describing their development of early human embryo-like structures.

That work has not yet been peer-reviewed, but now one group’s research has been published in the journal Nature, describing how they coaxed human embryonic stem cells to self-organise into a model resembling an early embryo.

The research was welcomed by some scientists as an “impressive” advance that could help unlock secrets about the precarious early stages of pregnancies, when failure is most common.

Dr Jacob Hanna, a specialist in molecular genetics at Israel’s Weizmann Institute. Photo: AFP
Dr Jacob Hanna, a specialist in molecular genetics at Israel’s Weizmann Institute. Photo: AFP

The work will however renew debate on the need for clearer ethical rules on development of lab-grown human embryo models.

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