The resulting embryos were transferred to the wombs of female mice for gestation. So far, 13 mice have been born using the method, of which four survived to adulthood and produced offspring of their own. The technique is a long way from perfect, Palermo and Takeuchi admit. The researchers implanted more than 80 embryos, and of those that did survive to full term, several died soon after birth. It is not clear whether the technique would work for human sperm, in which cell division is more complex. Palermo estimates that each sperm could yield no more than eight clones, because allowing the cells to replicate more than three times could mean that the sperm DNA stops expressing male-specific genes. And the cloned sperm are spherical. Lacking the tails that normal sperm use to swim, they are suitable only for test-tube fertilization.
Nature
August 7, 2007
Original web page at Nature



