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posted by Cactus on Thursday February 27 2014, @10:00PM   Printer-friendly
from the Kwisatz-Haderach-breeding-program dept.

GungnirSniper writes:

The US Food and Drug Administration is holding hearings to help determine if they should allow oocyte modification of mitochondrial DNA, which could prevent hereditary diseases that cause issues, such as such as seizures and blindness, from being passed on by mothers. In layman's terms, this "three-parent IVF" would allow the mitochondrial DNA of an unaffected woman to replace that of the mother while keeping the main DNA, so the child would still look like the mother and father.

From Scientific American: "Once the mtDNA has been swapped out, the egg could be fertilized in the lab by the father's sperm and the embryo would be implanted back into mom where pregnancy would proceed. The resulting child would be the genetic offspring of the intended mother but would carry healthy mitochondrial genes from the donor."

The New York Times has a shorter version of the story, as well as an opinion column urging ethical and moral consideration of this procedure.

Is this an ethical way to prevent future harm, or the start of a slippery slope to designer babies? Is the creation of designer babies immoral?

 
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  • (Score: 2) by mmcmonster on Friday February 28 2014, @07:07AM

    by mmcmonster (401) on Friday February 28 2014, @07:07AM (#8414)

    Why do you assume this is only for the rich?

    That's like saying in the early 1980s that computers were (or in-vitro fertilization was) only for the well off.

    The rich pay for being on the forefront. Later on you get inexpensive mass-market options.

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