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The United Kingdom's decision to trial the technique of mitochondrial replacement is premature and ill-conceived, says Marcy Darnovsky.
The UK governments recent move towards human trials of mito- chondrial-replacement techniques has prompted intense interest among scientists and bioethicists, while the media continue to frame mitochondrial replacement as a matter of'three-parent babies! The description is accurate - it would involve a woman affected by mitochondrial disease, whose egg provides a nucleus, a second woman to provide a 'healthy egg and a mati to provide sperm - but this simple framing overshadows profound social and ethical concerns.
Mitochondrial-replacement procedures would constitute ger- mline modification. Were the United Kingdom to grant a regulatory go-ahead, it would unilaterally cross a legal and ethical line on this issue that has been observed by the entire international community. This consensus holds that genetic-engineering tools may be applied, with appropriate care and safeguards, to treat an individuals medical condition, but should not be used to modify gametes or early embryos and so manipulate the characteristics of future children.
Supporters argue that these concerns do not apply to modifications of mitochondrial DNA, which they characterize as an insignificant part of the human genome that does not affect a per- sohs identity. This is scientifically dubious. The genes involved have pervasive effects on develop- ment and metabolism. And the permissive...