Cloning:
The ethical issues,
dangers and risks
The Second Creation: Dolly and the Age of Biological Control
Authors: Ian Wilmut, Keith Campbell and Colin Tudge
By YAP KIM HAO
LIFE sciences is looming in importance
for the future of Singapore. Unfortunately, much of it is in terms
of economic development and viewed as an economic activity to
replace industries in the production of goods. Religious people
are raising ethical questions about the goals and processes of
such a form of technology.
The cloning of Dolly marks the turning point in genetic technology
and has significant consequences for humankind. The two scientists
of Roslin Institute who are the "parents" of Dolly have
written the book "The Second Creation" in collaboration
with science writer Colin Tudge. Ian Wilmut , the embryologist,
and Keith Campbell, the microbiologist, are the leaders of the
team who made the technological breakthrough to clone a mammal
from a cultured adult body cell in 1996.
Campbell and Wilmut regard "human cloning as a rather ugly
diversion, superfluous as a medical procedure and repugnant in
general". They were not primarily interested in human cloning
but cloning as a technique with many important possibilities for
humankind. It is another useful reproductive technology.
It is estimated that one in eight couples suffer from infertility.
Some techniques are old, and as early as in the late 18th century,
artificial insemination was practised. The freezing and thawing
of cells without killing them, known as cryopresentation, was
developed in 1953. It is estimated that more than one million
people have been conceived worldwide by artificial insemination.
The next technique is in-vitro fertilisation, which produces a
"test-tube" baby. The first baby, Louise Joy Brown,
was conceived not really in a test tube but in a petri dish and
was born on July 25, 1978. Patrick Steptoe, an obstetrician, and
Robert Edwards, a physiologist, who have experimented on mice,
transferred this technology to humans. It is projected that by
2005 half a million babies may be born by IVF in the United States
alone.
These techniques of reproduction require the egg, sperm and womb
and they come from the parents or donors or surrogates. The sexual
fusion of egg and sperm can come about naturally or artificially.
This ensures that no two creatures are alike except in identical
multiple births due to the division of the embryo in the womb.
Even then identical twins cannot be exactly alike since other
factors come into play in human development.
Cloning is the new stage and it is not the result of the fusion
of egg and sperm. It is by the process of nuclear transfer. Cells
from the embryo and foetuses were used to clone other animals.
In the case of Dolly, the ewe donated the adult mammary cells
which were introduced to eggs whose nuclei have been removed.
Campbell and Wilmut constructed 277 embryos and only 13 went on
to develop further and were transferred into 13 ewes. Only one
solitary surrogate mother was able to produce a live lamb, and
that was Dolly. The name was inspired by Dolly Parton stressing
the mammary connection.
The common belief is that the clone is exactly identical with
the parent who provided the nucleus that replaced the one in the
egg. Even though identical twins share the same set of genes when
the embryo splits into two and there are obvious similarities,
there are striking differences. This is because during development
the genes may change or mutate and are in constant interaction
with the environment, first in the womb and then in the larger
world. Over time they may be different genetically. The difference
may be slight but obvious. That is the case of cloned animals
which are not xeroxed copies of the original.
At present, there are dangers in cloning. Foetuses produced by
cell transfer are 10 times more likely to die in the uterus. Different
deformities also occur and the life span is shortened. Cloned
offspring are three times more likely to die soon after birth.
There are still many unknowns in the cloning of human persons.
Genetic engineering using the technology
brought about by cloning can change the nature of humanity itself.
It transfers genes from one organism to another. Damaged tissues
can technically be removed, manipulated and returned to the body.
This does not raise an ethical issue. The issue arises when genes
are being altered, added or subtracted which affect succeeding
generations. We are therefore in a position to determine the very
nature of persons.
The risk is because we do not fully know the character of the
gene and the structure of the genome which covers all the genes
in one organism. The theory is that we can identify the single
gene relating to a certain disorder. But genes live and interact
with the 80,000 genes and individually and corporately they affect
the functions of the total organism. Genes may affect more than
one characteristic and together with others affect other characteristics.
Even though the reproductive process has developed significantly
leading to the technological possibility of cloning human beings
which Clonaid has recently claimed, the ethical issue is the kind
of nature of the human being in the future and who determines
it. It will fall into the hands of the rich and technologically
powerful who will control genetic engineering.
There is the more serious question for religious people who believe
that God is the Creator of life. Is there a place for God or has
God been edged out or marginalised? Even though we are more conversant
with the process of reproduction of new life there is yet the
mystery of life. What is life is the fundamental question. Is
it just an evolutionary process and by chance eggs are fertilised
and cells are differentiated to form the living body? We can describe
the process and the techniques of directing certain changes to
the human organism, but how did they come about and act the way
they do? Who is responsible?
The faithful will continue to affirm the work of God.
The Rev Dr Yap Kim Hao, a member of the Methodist Message Editorial Board, was the first Asian Bishop of The Methodist Church in Malaysia and Singapore.
QUOTE:
HAS GOD BEEN EDGED OUT?
There is the more serious question for religious people who believe
that God is the Creator of life. Is there a place for God or has
God been edged out or marginalised?