human stem cells the perspective of a catholic physician-scientist jose c. florez md, phd...

42
Human stem cells The perspective of a Catholic physician-scientist Jose C. Florez MD, PhD Massachusetts General Hospital Harvard Medical School

Upload: aileen-bond

Post on 27-Dec-2015

219 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Human stem cells The perspective of a Catholic physician-scientist Jose C. Florez MD, PhD Massachusetts General Hospital Harvard Medical School

Human stem cells The perspective of a

Catholic physician-scientist

Jose C. Florez MD, PhDMassachusetts General Hospital

Harvard Medical School

Page 2: Human stem cells The perspective of a Catholic physician-scientist Jose C. Florez MD, PhD Massachusetts General Hospital Harvard Medical School
Page 3: Human stem cells The perspective of a Catholic physician-scientist Jose C. Florez MD, PhD Massachusetts General Hospital Harvard Medical School

Outline

• Intro on human development• What are stem cells?• What can stem cells be used for?• How do we obtain stem cells?• What is a human embryo?• How should we treat a human embryo?• Alternatives

Page 4: Human stem cells The perspective of a Catholic physician-scientist Jose C. Florez MD, PhD Massachusetts General Hospital Harvard Medical School

Fertilization

Sperm & egg Embryo

Page 5: Human stem cells The perspective of a Catholic physician-scientist Jose C. Florez MD, PhD Massachusetts General Hospital Harvard Medical School

The embryo’s journey

Page 6: Human stem cells The perspective of a Catholic physician-scientist Jose C. Florez MD, PhD Massachusetts General Hospital Harvard Medical School

Implantation

Page 7: Human stem cells The perspective of a Catholic physician-scientist Jose C. Florez MD, PhD Massachusetts General Hospital Harvard Medical School
Page 8: Human stem cells The perspective of a Catholic physician-scientist Jose C. Florez MD, PhD Massachusetts General Hospital Harvard Medical School

What arestem cells?

Page 9: Human stem cells The perspective of a Catholic physician-scientist Jose C. Florez MD, PhD Massachusetts General Hospital Harvard Medical School

Copyright ©2005 American Physiological Society

Wobus, A. M. et al. Physiol. Rev. 85: 635-678 2005

Stages of development

Page 10: Human stem cells The perspective of a Catholic physician-scientist Jose C. Florez MD, PhD Massachusetts General Hospital Harvard Medical School

Copyright ©2005 American Physiological Society

Wobus, A. M. et al. Physiol. Rev. 85: 635-678 2005

Stem cells can become different tissues

Page 11: Human stem cells The perspective of a Catholic physician-scientist Jose C. Florez MD, PhD Massachusetts General Hospital Harvard Medical School

Mayhall, Paffett-Lugassy and Zon, Curr Opinion Cell Biol 16 (2004) 713-720

The promise

Page 12: Human stem cells The perspective of a Catholic physician-scientist Jose C. Florez MD, PhD Massachusetts General Hospital Harvard Medical School

Disease Stem Cell Therapy GoalHematologic disorders

 Leukemias Replace marrow ; graf t vs tumor

 Multiple myeloma Replace marrow ; graf t vs tumor

 Sickle cell anemia Replace or correct erythrocytes

Autoimmune diseases

 Systemic lupus erythematosus Reconstitute immune system

 Crohn disease Reconstitute immune system

Immune def iciency disorders

 Severe combined immune def iciency Gene correction in immune cells

 Wiscott-A ldrich Gene correction in immune cells

Cardiovascular diseases

 Myocardial ischemia Replace ischemic cardiomyocytes

Hepatic disease

 Hepatic failure Replace or regenerate hepatocytes

Metabolic disorders

 Diabetes Replace pancreatic islets or induce beta cell dif ferentiation

 Osteoporosis Regenerate bone

 Gaucher disease Express glucocerebrosidase in macrophages

Musculoskeletal disorders

 Duchenne muscular dystrophy Replace myoblasts

Neurologic disorders

 Parkinson's disease Replace dopamine-producing neurons

Potential Applications of Stem Cell Therapy

Page 13: Human stem cells The perspective of a Catholic physician-scientist Jose C. Florez MD, PhD Massachusetts General Hospital Harvard Medical School

Adultstem cells

Page 14: Human stem cells The perspective of a Catholic physician-scientist Jose C. Florez MD, PhD Massachusetts General Hospital Harvard Medical School

[Adapted from NIH Guide on Stem Cells: Scientific Promise and Future, 2001 Terese Winslow–medical illustrator ©2001, Terese Winslow.]

Page 15: Human stem cells The perspective of a Catholic physician-scientist Jose C. Florez MD, PhD Massachusetts General Hospital Harvard Medical School

Korbling, M. et al. N Engl J Med 2003;349:570-582

Possible Roles of Adult Stem Cells in Tissue Repair

Page 16: Human stem cells The perspective of a Catholic physician-scientist Jose C. Florez MD, PhD Massachusetts General Hospital Harvard Medical School

Korbling, M. et al. N Engl J Med 2003;349:570-582

Page 17: Human stem cells The perspective of a Catholic physician-scientist Jose C. Florez MD, PhD Massachusetts General Hospital Harvard Medical School

Just recently published

Page 18: Human stem cells The perspective of a Catholic physician-scientist Jose C. Florez MD, PhD Massachusetts General Hospital Harvard Medical School

So where do we get stem cells from?

• From adult tissues

• From the umbilical cord of newborns

• From healthy fetuses

• From embryos

Page 19: Human stem cells The perspective of a Catholic physician-scientist Jose C. Florez MD, PhD Massachusetts General Hospital Harvard Medical School

Copyright ©2005 American Physiological Society

Wobus, A. M. et al. Physiol. Rev. 85: 635-678 2005

From an embryo… From a fetus…

Page 20: Human stem cells The perspective of a Catholic physician-scientist Jose C. Florez MD, PhD Massachusetts General Hospital Harvard Medical School

Korbling, M. et al. N Engl J Med 2003;349:570-582

How do you get an embryo?

Page 21: Human stem cells The perspective of a Catholic physician-scientist Jose C. Florez MD, PhD Massachusetts General Hospital Harvard Medical School

Mayhall, Paffett-Lugassy and Zon, Curr Opinion Cell Biol 16 (2004) 713-720

You can make onethrough human

cloning

(aka nuclear transfer)

Page 22: Human stem cells The perspective of a Catholic physician-scientist Jose C. Florez MD, PhD Massachusetts General Hospital Harvard Medical School

Steinbrook, R. N Engl J Med 2006;354:324-326

Retrieval of Oocytes

Page 23: Human stem cells The perspective of a Catholic physician-scientist Jose C. Florez MD, PhD Massachusetts General Hospital Harvard Medical School

Snyder, E. Y. et al. N Engl J Med 2006;354:321-324

Somatic-Cell Nuclear Transfer

Page 24: Human stem cells The perspective of a Catholic physician-scientist Jose C. Florez MD, PhD Massachusetts General Hospital Harvard Medical School

Copyright ©2005 American Physiological Society

Wobus, A. M. et al. Physiol. Rev. 85: 635-678 2005

Human cloning

• Human cloning generates a much younger copy of oneself

• Usually defective

• But viable

Page 25: Human stem cells The perspective of a Catholic physician-scientist Jose C. Florez MD, PhD Massachusetts General Hospital Harvard Medical School

Hochedlinger, K. et al. N Engl J Med 2003;349:275-286

Reproductive Cloning and Therapeutic Cloning

Page 26: Human stem cells The perspective of a Catholic physician-scientist Jose C. Florez MD, PhD Massachusetts General Hospital Harvard Medical School

Is reproductive cloning possible?

Dolly the sheep

Page 27: Human stem cells The perspective of a Catholic physician-scientist Jose C. Florez MD, PhD Massachusetts General Hospital Harvard Medical School

Hochedlinger, K. et al. N Engl J Med 2003;349:275-286

Reproductive cloning generates defective adults: most scientists agree on moratorium

Page 28: Human stem cells The perspective of a Catholic physician-scientist Jose C. Florez MD, PhD Massachusetts General Hospital Harvard Medical School

Landry and Zucker, J. Clin. Invest. 114:1184-1186 (2004)

The problem

To harvest embryonic stem cells, the embryo must be destroyed

Page 29: Human stem cells The perspective of a Catholic physician-scientist Jose C. Florez MD, PhD Massachusetts General Hospital Harvard Medical School

What is an embryo?

• It’s alive• It’s human• It’s an individual, separate and distinct from

the mother

• Therefore, he/she is a member of our species Homo sapiens

• We were all embryos once…

Page 30: Human stem cells The perspective of a Catholic physician-scientist Jose C. Florez MD, PhD Massachusetts General Hospital Harvard Medical School

But it’s so small! Just a cell…

• Human beings are defined by what they are, not by what they can do

• Is a mentally retarded person less human?• Is a patient with a stroke or dementia less

human?• Humanity goes beyond skills and abilities• An enlightened society protects its weakest

members

Page 31: Human stem cells The perspective of a Catholic physician-scientist Jose C. Florez MD, PhD Massachusetts General Hospital Harvard Medical School

How should we treat a living member of our species?

• We do not take an innocent person’s life• We do not perform surgery on another human

being without his/her consent• We do not force him/her to donate organs

Page 32: Human stem cells The perspective of a Catholic physician-scientist Jose C. Florez MD, PhD Massachusetts General Hospital Harvard Medical School

But the benefits are so great…

• The end does not justify the means

• The intentions are good, the goal is good, the result is good; but if the action itself is bad, then the entire procedure is unethical

• We could save many people by forcing a single person to donate both kidneys, heart, liver, lungs, pancreas, corneas…

Page 33: Human stem cells The perspective of a Catholic physician-scientist Jose C. Florez MD, PhD Massachusetts General Hospital Harvard Medical School

But the embryos are frozenand are going to die anyway…

• So are people on death row… Should we take their organs?

Page 34: Human stem cells The perspective of a Catholic physician-scientist Jose C. Florez MD, PhD Massachusetts General Hospital Harvard Medical School

Solter, D. N Engl J Med 2005;353:2321-2323

Derivation of Mouse Embryonic Stem Cells from an Eight-Cell Embryo

A ray of hope: Scientists’ attempts to remain within ethical boundaries

Harvesting?

Defective?

Embryo?

Page 35: Human stem cells The perspective of a Catholic physician-scientist Jose C. Florez MD, PhD Massachusetts General Hospital Harvard Medical School

It has recently been done to human embryos(in our own back yard)

Human embryonic stem cell lines derived from single blastomeresIrina Klimanskaya, Young Chung, Sandy Becker, Shi-Jiang Lu and Robert Lanza

Nature , doi:10.1038/nature05142

Page 36: Human stem cells The perspective of a Catholic physician-scientist Jose C. Florez MD, PhD Massachusetts General Hospital Harvard Medical School

Solter, D. N Engl J Med 2005;353:2321-2323

Derivation of Mouse Embryonic Stem Cells from Blastocysts That are Rendered Incapable of Full Development

“Not an embryo”or

a diseased embryo?

Page 37: Human stem cells The perspective of a Catholic physician-scientist Jose C. Florez MD, PhD Massachusetts General Hospital Harvard Medical School

Copyright ©2006 AlphaMed Press

Gruen, L. et al. Stem Cells 006;24:2162-2169

Summary of approaches to generate human embryonic stem cells

Page 38: Human stem cells The perspective of a Catholic physician-scientist Jose C. Florez MD, PhD Massachusetts General Hospital Harvard Medical School

Countries where embryonic stem cells are being harvested

Page 39: Human stem cells The perspective of a Catholic physician-scientist Jose C. Florez MD, PhD Massachusetts General Hospital Harvard Medical School

When ethics and research part ways…

Dr. Woo-Suk Hwang

Page 40: Human stem cells The perspective of a Catholic physician-scientist Jose C. Florez MD, PhD Massachusetts General Hospital Harvard Medical School

Alternatives

• Continue to advance therapeutic uses of adult stem cells

• Expand existing umbilical cord stem cell banks• Research ways to make adult stem cells more versatile• Research ways to create stem cells while bypassing the

embryo stage• Work with existing embryonic stem cell lines• Explore ways of making animal stem cells amenable to

implantation in humans

Page 41: Human stem cells The perspective of a Catholic physician-scientist Jose C. Florez MD, PhD Massachusetts General Hospital Harvard Medical School

Conclusions

• The Church is not opposed to research; it’s opposed to unethical research

• We must protect the most vulnerable• There is no scientific argument that proves that

the embryo is not a live member of our species• There are ways to generate stem cells without

destroying human embryos• We must be kept informed• We must defend the culture of life

Page 42: Human stem cells The perspective of a Catholic physician-scientist Jose C. Florez MD, PhD Massachusetts General Hospital Harvard Medical School

Thank you

“Do not wait for leaders; do it alone, person to person.”

“Do not wait for leaders; do it alone, person to person.”