August 10, 2011

Nature: "The ethics of using transgenic non-human primates to study what makes us human"

This was published last year: The ethics of using transgenic non-human primates to study what makes us human by Marilyn E. Coors, Jacqueline J. Glover, Eric T. Juengst and James M. Sikela.

Abstract:
A flood of comparative genomic data is resulting in the identification of human lineage-specific (HLS) sequences. As apes are our closest evolutionary relatives, transgenic introduction of HLS sequences into these species has the greatest potential to produce 'humanized' phenotypes and also to illuminate the functions of these sequences. We argue that such transgenic apes would also be more likely than other species to experience harm from such research, which renders such studies ethically unacceptable in apes and justifies regulatory barriers between these species and other non-human primates for HLS transgenic research.

1 comment:

Humanimal said...

Thank goodness. Hopefully bioethicists will also figure out that ALL vertebrates would suffer greatly from the insertion of HLS sequences into their genome. Apes are not the only animals that feel pain, frustration, anger, sadness, confusion, etc.