Autor/es reacciones

Lluís Montoliu

Research professor at the National Biotechnology Centre (CNB-CSIC) and at the CIBERER-ISCIII

 

The fundamental challenge in biology remains to understand how a living organism as complex as any of us develops from a single cell. Understanding how hundreds of different cell types emerge during embryonic development from a single single cell embryo, which is the product of the fertilisation of an egg by a sperm. To answer these questions, we can witness the development of other animals, such as zebrafish, whose embryos develop externally, inside transparent eggs that allow us to see everything that is going on inside. However, for mammals, like us, it is much more difficult, since the embryo implants in the uterus of the female and develops inside anatomical structures that are difficult to see and access. Our ability to observe in detail, directly, what happens during the development of a mammalian embryo is limited to the early stages, prior to the implantation of the embryo in the uterus.  

This is the challenge that Magdalena Zernicka-Goetz's lab set itself and whose results she now presents in her paper published in the journal Nature. She has managed to reproduce the initial stages of development of a mammalian embryo, from a mouse, in the laboratory, without needing the participation of a female to implant the embryo. And they have also achieved this without the need to resort to the fertilisation of an egg by a spermatozoon. Instead, these researchers have used different types of embryonic stem cells (stem cells) which, when mixed together, give rise to a new biological structure that looks very much like a natural embryo, without being one. These are synthetic embryos, developed entirely in the laboratory. 

For the extra-uterine development of these synthetic embryos, Zernicka's laboratory at Caltech (California, USA) has used a device, an artificial incubator, which makes it possible to simulate the physiological conditions that exist in the female uterus. This ingenious technical solution was developed by the laboratory of Jacob Hanna of the Weizmann Institute in Israel, co-author of this study and who also reported similar experiments a few weeks ago, published in the journal Cell.  

The synthetic embryos reach a stage equivalent to that of natural embryos at 8-9 days gestation, almost half the pregnancy time in mice, which is 19-20 days. And they manage to develop very similar anatomical structures, such as the heart, with its beat, and the brain, with its different areas. These synthetic embryos are not embryos, but they are useful for research. 

Since these synthetic embryos are derived from embryonic stem cells in culture, they can also be generated from cells that contain a mutation in some gene, and thus investigate the effect that this mutation produces in the initial phases of development, observing directly in the laboratory what happens at each moment. This is a privilege that researchers did not have before with mammalian embryos.  

We are undoubtedly facing a new technological revolution, still very inefficient (it is very difficult to get stem cells to spontaneously generate a synthetic embryo), but with enormous potential. It is reminiscent of such spectacular scientific advances as the birth of Dolly the sheep, which we met in 1997, reconstructing an embryo with the nucleus of a somatic cell, or the inducible pluripotent embryonic stem cells, iPS cells, described by Yamanaka in 2006, which led him to win the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine in 2012, shared with John Gurdon, pioneer of animal cloning in amphibians. A revolution that naturally also raises new ethical dilemmas, if we ever think of transferring these experiments to the human species for the generation of synthetic human embryos, perhaps with the aim of using them to obtain new tissues or organs to repair or replace those that are damaged, as Hanna has already proposed to explore, through a company he has created ad hoc

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