What if men with fertility problems could grow new sperm from their own skin cells? Just imagine, how much time, money and resources it would save. A team of researchers has made this possible by growing human gametes in a lab.
i.guim
This incredible discovery was done by scientists in Spain using a cocktail of genes to turn human skin cells into germ cells, which can eventually be developed into sperm or eggs.
Researcher Carlos Simon from the Valencian Infertility Institute said, "What to do when someone who wants to have a child lacks gametes (eggs or sperm)? This is the problem we want to address: to be able to create gametes in people who do not have them."
The team says they were inspired by the Nobel Prize-winning work of Japan's Shinya Yamanaka and Britain's John Gordon back in 2012. The pair had discovered that mature, adult cells could be turned into any other type of tissue.
telegraph
In their experiment, the team added a cocktail of genes to skins cells, which then took about a month to turn into the germ cells. While the germ cells could be developed into sperm, it wouldn't have the ability to fertilise, because a further mutation phase is required to create a gamete, Simon says.
"With the human species we must do much more testing because we are talking about the birth of child," he explains. "We are talking about a long process."
Earlier this year, Chinese researchers used 'test-tube' sperm cells to fertilise mouse eggs. Healthy mouse offspring were produced using the technique, but doing the same using human embryos represents a whole new level of complexity.
The study is published in the journal Scientific Reports.