Science Scientists Create A Device That Can Mass Produce Human Embryoids - Begun, the Clone Wars has.

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https://www.npr.org/sections/health...that-can-mass-produce-synthetic-human-embryos
Scientists have invented a device that can quickly produce large numbers of living entities that resemble very primitive human embryos.

Researchers welcomed the development, described Wednesday in the journal Nature, as an important advance for studying the earliest days of human embryonic development. But it also raises questions about where to draw the line in manufacturing "synthetic" human life.

Other scientists have previously created synthetic embryos, which are also known as embryoids. These entities are made by coaxing human stem cells to form structures found in very early human embryos. The research has raised questions about how similar to complete embryos they could and should be allowed to become.

The new work takes such research further by creating a method that can rapidly generate relatively large numbers of embryoids.

"This new system allows us to achieve a superior efficiency to generate these human embryo-like structures," says Jianping Fu, an associate professor of biomedical engineering at the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor, who led the research.

Fu calls the step "an exciting new milestone for this emerging field" that should significantly improve the ability of scientists to study early human development.

"Such human embryo-like structures have a lot of potential to open what we call the so-called black box of human development," Fu says.

He's referring to the first few weeks after a sperm fertilizes an egg, when the embryo is inside a woman's body and hard to study. A long-standing guideline bars scientists from conducting research on embryos in their labs beyond 14 days of development for ethical reasons.

Fu says the ability to produce large numbers of embryoids, which are not subject to the 14-day guideline, will hopefully provide scientists with new insights into important health issues, including how to prevent birth defects and miscarriages. In addition, researchers could use the embryoids to screen drugs, to help determine whether the medications are safe for pregnant women to take.

"Such research can lead to a lot of good," Fu says.

Other scientists agree.

"It's a major advance in the knowledge of early human development," says Ali Brivanlou, an embryologist at the Rockefeller University in New York. "We're opening up windows to aspects of development that we have never seen before. This knowledge is really the Holy Grail of human embryology."

Other scientists and bioethicists agree. But they also caution that Fu's research raises sensitive issues.

"This team needs to be very careful not to model all aspects of the developing human embryo, so that they can avoid the concern that this embryo model could one day become a baby if you put it in the womb," says Insoo Hyun, a bioethicist at Case Western Reserve University and Harvard Medical School.

Because of such concerns, Fu says he purposefully made embryoids that are not complete models of full human embryos. They only "resemble a portion of the human embryo — the core of the early human embryo," Fu says. They are missing key structures, such as the early stages of the placenta and "yolk sac," which provide nourishment to embryos.

"I understand that there may be people sensitive when you see that you can massively produce organized embryonic structures. People will be concerned. I understand that. I guess we are pushing the boundary," Fu says.

"But I want to make 100% clear that we have no intention of trying to generate a synthetic structure [that] looks like a complete human embryo," Fu says. "We have zero intention to do that."

Others praised Fu's approach, saying going further would be highly problematic.

"That would be sort of a very early sort of Frankenstein model, right? Taking different parts and stitching them together in order to try to create an organism," says Daniel Sulmasy, a bioethicist at Georgetown University.

"If somebody tried to do it and it were even at the earliest stages of embryonic development, and they tried to then let it develop further, that would be a problem," Sulmasy says.

The device Fu created is a thin silicone square. The plate contains four wells around a narrow channel. The scientists place stem cells — either human embryonic stem cells or induced pluripotent stem cells, which can be made from adult cells — into the device. Next, the researchers add to adjoining wells chemicals that stimulate the cells to grow key structures of human embryos.

Each device can produce about a dozen embryoids in just a few days, Fu says, and that enables the scientists to produce hundreds of the structures by using many of the devices simultaneously.

The rapid advances in embryoid creation have prompted the International Society for Stem Cell Research to launch a review of its guidelines.

"If these embryo models end up being complete and are built to have all the components of natural embryos, they should be subject to the same 14-day rule that limits research with natural human embryos," Hyun says. "That's one more reason to avoid modeling the whole thing at once."

Copyright 2019 NPR. To see more, visit NPR.

Not sure how I feel about this. On the one hand, this could be of massive use for scientific and medical research, or for growing replacement organs for transplant. On the other hand, it could also be the first step in 3D printing an army. And the head of the project is Chinese, and the last thing the world needs is for China to be able to mass produce more soldiers.

/tinfoilhat
 
I'm sure designer baby soldiers are already being grown behind closed doors everywhere that has the tech to do so. Legalities only apply when people find out
 
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"Save your strength, Captain. These people have sworn to live and die at my command 200 years before you were born."
 
Looking forward to my replacement body. I swear in the next 10-20 years we'll see devices that can accurately map brains with such detail they can recreate a person's consciousness.

Ship of Theseus anyone?

Mass-producing humans? Sounds like a great idea with modern over-population.

Earth isn't overpopulated. Certain areas are dense but the Earth itself has a lot of open space. Of course that goes against the muh mankind is bad we gotta control population! narrative but whatever.
 
Incels rejoice, your ability to clone Stacy as your personal sex slave is now on the horizon!

Or create an evil mutant clone army of Elliot Rodgers, or even a personal army for Beto's firearm confiscation plans. God knows he's unlikely to convince the current army to do it, LOL
 
Hell yea, we're getting closer to irl Deus Ex than ever.
I'm sure designer baby soldiers are already being grown behind closed doors everywhere that has the tech to do so. Legalities only apply when people find out
That's basically the plot of Kurt Russell's, "Soldier". Damn good sci-fi movie.

In a futuristic society, some people are selected at birth to become soldiers, and trained in such a manner that they become inhuman killing machines. One of the most succesfull and older of these soldiers (Russell) is pitted against a new breed of soldiers, and after the confrontation is believed to be dead. His body is left behind in a semi-abandoned colonial planet, where everything is peaceful, and he is taught about the other aspects of life. But eventually he has to fight the new breed of soldiers again, this time to defend his new home...
Fun fact: many people suggest that the movie takes place in the Blade Runner universe, so it's something of a "spiritual sequel" to it.

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I remember this shitty YA book called Epitaph Road where something caused 99.9% of the men to die, and lower the rate of men being born or some shit. Either way, as a result of this pretty much everyone was a test tube baby, and the slang for this was "fish," and it was kind of a mark of shame.
My point is, if this kind of stuff becomes accessible and more advanced, how much push-back and all that would be likely for people who are 'created' in this way? I predict a decent amount, especially if you can just pay to make your very own Harrison Bergeron.
 
I don't know why people are stuck in the past in terms of weaponizing feeble humanoids. It takes a long time for a human to grow and mature. Time is money. Did Hnery Ford taught you nothing? If I wanted a clone army I'd go in direction of cloning chimps, faster maturity and better muscle ratio, plus good affinity to violence and less bitching about "tears in the rain".

The warfare will evolve beyond humanoids toting a boom stick. In 10's century, Kyiv duchess Olga reportedly obtained pigeons from a besieged city and ordered to tie smoldering strings to them, before releasing them. The birds flew back to the city which started multiple fires that burned the city to the ground. Boom. First use of bio-drones, bitches. There is nothing like a woman scorned. (assholes killed her husband, she went pre-medieval on 'em)

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Does this mean we're finally going to take steps to reduce abortions and the use of fetus body parts for tests and skin creams as we have a better access to an alternative?

No?

Well Moloch decides, I suppose.
 
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