| International Society
for Stem Cell Research Recommendation for a Revised Nomenclature
This statement was prepared by an International Society for Stem
Cell Research (ISSCR) task force and approved by vote of the ISSCR
Board of Directors and membership. ISSCR is a nonprofit professional
society comprised of scientists and ethicists representing a broad
range of opinions and specialties dealing with stem cell research.
The inaccurate use in various public and scientific venues of various
terms dealing with the production of stem cell lines by the transfer
of body cell (somatic) nuclei into enucleated eggs of the same species,
and the negative connotation of the commercial term ‘therapeutic
cloning'; make a change in terminology necessary. The aim of this
terminology change is to provide accurate, standardized terminology
that will facilitate frank scientific, ethical and public debate
on stem cells and their potential for medicine.
ISSCR encourages its members and the scientific press to use these
terminologies in publications, presentations and communications.
This will introduce scientifically accurate terminology into scientific
as well as general literature and language.
This statement addresses two commonly used descriptors in stem
cell research:
1. The production of stem cell lines by the transfer of body
cell (somatic) nuclei into
enucleated eggs of the same species, commonly
referred to as “ therapeutic
cloning ”.
- The ISSCR supports and endorses the use of the term “nuclear
transfer” in place of “therapeutic cloning” to
refer to the production of stem cell lines by the transfer of
body cell (somatic) nuclei into enucleated eggs of the same species.
Nuclear transfer is abbreviated as “ NT ”. Cells
created by nuclear transfer should be described as “ NT
stem cells ” or “ NTSC ”.
The term “cloning” does not accurately describe this biological
process. Cells generated by nuclear transfer are by no definition
a clone of the donor of the transferred nucleus, as the enucleated
oocyte still contains numerous stable maternal proteins that are
transmitted for several cellular divisions and could impact on gene
expression, numerous types of maternal RNA, as well as maternal
mitochondrial DNA. It is known that at least some of these molecules
impact significantly on expression of the incoming transferred genes,
for example, converting somatic cell genomes (such as skin subsets
committed to skin specific gene expressions) to pluripotent cells.
Mitochondrial genes are highly sequence diverse, and the interaction
of nuclear genes/products with mitochondrial genes/products introduce
even higher combinatorial diversity, and so no scientifically based
assertion can be made as to the ‘clonality' of the cells produced
through nuclear transfer. The term “therapeutic cloning” as used
to describe all stem cells generated through nuclear transfer is
therefore scientifically erroneous and misleading.
The term “therapeutic” is equally misleading. While the stem
cell research community is dedicated to the search for therapies
using the technique of nuclear transfer, it is far too early to
predict therapeutic uses, and naming a technique for its hoped outcome
may inadvertently offer premature hope to desperate patients and
families.
2. Human embryonic stem cells derived from
pre-implantation blastocysts produced
by sperm-egg fertilization, commonly referred
to by a variety of acronyms.
The ISSCR supports and endorses the use of the acronym “hESC”
in place of any other acronyms used to reference human embryonic
stem cells derived from pre-implantation blastocysts produced by sperm-egg
fertilization.
Posted September 27, 2004 |