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Cloning fraud takes NT back to square one

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Cloning fraud puts research 'back on the starting line'




By Jonathan Watts and Ian Sample

BEIJING: Research that gave hope to millions of people with incurable diseases 
has been put "back on the starting line" by one of the worst cases of 
scientific fraud.

Dr Woo-suk Hwang was forced to quit his post at South Korea's leading academic 
institution, Seoul National University, following an investigation into his 
apparently pioneering work on human cloning. Alison Murdoch, who led the team 
at Newcastle's Fertility Centre that cloned the first human embryo in Europe, 
said the search for stem cell therapies to cure conditions such as Parkinson's, 
diabetes and spinal cord injury had been seriously damaged.

"We're back on the starting line. When Hwang's work was published, we assumed 
it was just a case of the rest of us learning how to do it. Now, we've still 
got to get to that first stage. Nobody wins in this, everybody loses," she said.

Dr Hwang published papers in which he claimed to have achieved two world firsts 
by cloning a human embryo and a dog, and raised hopes for new cures by claiming 
to create stem cells tailored to patients with diseases. However, a panel of 
nine experts at the university accused Dr Hwang of "major misconduct that 
undermines the fundamentals of science". They said he had falsified at least 
nine of 11 embryonic stem cell lines that he announced in a research paper 
published in a US journal in May.

Patient groups have reacted with dismay to Friday announcement. "This is very 
disappointing, and does set back research that could lead to effective 
treatments for motor neurone disease," said Brian Dickie, director of research 
development at the Motor Neurone Disease Association. "However, we believe the 
scientific rationale behind therapeutic cloning is sound, and that it still 
offers a significant opportunity for achieving a breakthrough." Robert 
Meadowcroft at the Parkinson's Disease Society said: "This can be seen as a 
disappointing setback for people with Parkinson's."

The exposure of the fraud was seized on by opponents of stem cell research. 
Josephine Quintavalle of Comment on Reproductive Ethics called for a thorough 
investigation of all cloning claims that "piggy-backed" on Dr Hwang's research, 
in particular the work carried out by Dr Murdoch at Newcastle. Fallout from the 
investigation is likely to threaten plans for Britain to join the World Stem 
Cell Hub, a South Korean network of laboratories specialising in the field. 
"The future for any collaboration with South Korea is effectively gone," said 
Dr Murdoch.

Dr Hwang had claimed he had pioneered a technique to engineer stem cells, which 
can develop into any type of human tissue. This created uproar among those who 
consider it unethical to manipulate such cells, which are taken from human 
embryos. But it was a source of optimism for sufferers of spinal cord injuries 
and Parkinson's disease, who believed it brought nearer the day when 
laboratories could tailor-make healthy replacement tissues that their own 
bodies were unable to produce.

Doubts began to surface last month, when Dr Hwang admitted that he broke 
ethical guidelines by procuring human eggs from female employees at the 
university. Co-authors of the paper withdrew their support, and rumours began 
circulating on scientific bulletin boards that many of Dr Hwang's results were 
bogus. The investigation panel discovered that his team split cells from one 
patient into two test tubes, which they then misleadingly claimed to have come 
from different sources: one real, one cloned.

"Based on these findings, the data in 2005 was intentionally fabricated, not an 
accidental error," said Roe Jung-hye, chief of Seoul National University's 
research office, in a televised news conference to a shocked nation. "It is 
difficult for Professor Hwang not to avoid taking major 
responsibility."-Dawn/The Guardian News Service





 
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