| Cloning
movie is more fiction than science
COLLEGE PARK, MD (JULY 21, 2005)--At one time or another everyone wishes that
there were two of them so that they could be in two places at once or get twice
as many things done. Think about the possibilities of having your own clone --
a genetic copy of you. If your liver became diseased and you needed an organ
transplant, your clone could donate the perfect match of your liver with no risk
of rejection. The idea might sound great, but imagine waking up one day and discovering
that you were the clone, just biding time until your “sponsor” needed
you.
This is the premise behind the movie The Island, opening in theaters nationwide
June 22. Lincoln Six-Echo (Ewan McGregor) and Jordan Two-Delta (Scarlett Johansson)
are living in a futuristic utopian facility, because the Earth has been contaminated.
Everyone at the facility anxiously lines up in anticipation of the weekly lottery
drawing to be picked to go to The Island, which is the last place on Earth free
of contamination. Lincoln Six-Echo soon learns that he is one of thousands of
harvest clones -- and that being picked to go to The Island isn’t a vacation:
instead it means that their “sponsors” are ready to harvest them
for the organs they need.
“The premise of The Island would never happen in real life,” says
Dr. Suzanne Holland, a bioethicist at the University of Puget Sound, Tacoma,
Wash. “Right now, cloning is expensive, inefficient, and unsafe, but if
it ever becomes cheap, efficient, and safe, then, we might have reason to worry.
But for now, it is a long way off.”
In the movie, clones are created through methods similar to actual reproductive
cloning. Reproductive cloning creates an animal with the same DNA as the original
animal. For example, Dolly the sheep was created by British researchers in 1996
using reproductive cloning. Geneticists insert DNA into an egg which has had
its DNA removed. The egg is treated with chemicals or an electric current to
trigger the cells to divide. Once the embryo reaches an appropriate stage, it
is transferred into a female’s uterus until birth.
The movie’s creation of clones combines the ideas of reproductive cloning
with therapeutic cloning. In therapeutic cloning, human embryos are grown to
harvest stem cells. Stem cells can be used to generate any kind of cell in the
human body, for example, skin, heart, and liver cells. Once an egg has divided
for five days, stem cells can be extracted. This destroys the embryo, which is
one of the ethical concerns of this process, but experts say that this type of
cloning has the potential to be useful for organ transplants.
In the movie, DNA is taken from a donor, and in a year, the clone is grown
to the age of the donor. So in the movie, a 30-year-old donor could get a 30-year
old clone in just 12 months. This can't happen in the real world. A clone is
a twin, separated in time. Just as identical twins share DNA when the fertilized
egg divides into two separate bodies, a clone uses the exact same DNA as its
original and develops at the same rate.
The movie shows that just like people have their reasons for having controversial
procedures such as abortion or plastic surgery, there are people on The Island
who have their reasons for creating a clone. Some are for medical reasons and
some are for selfish reasons. The movie does touch on the ethical issues raised
by cloning and some of the issues come from possibilities that science hasn’t
discovered yet.
"The big issues we'll face over the next decade or two won't involve
cloning whole human beings, but organs and tissue," says Dr. Patrick Derr,
an expert in medical ethics and health policy at Clark University, Worcester,
Mass. "Veterinary research on things like fractional embryo fusion may open
doors we can barely imagine, and raise deep issues about justice and equal access."
As we watch Lincoln Six-Echo and Jordan Two-Delta attempt to escape their
harvest fate, we’ll know that science still has a long road ahead, with
many scientific and ethical issues that need to be addressed, but there is also
much possibility.
Rated PG –13
Inside Science's Science Rating: 2 stars
More information
For Dr. Suzanne Holland
Contact - Melissa Rohlfs
Media Relations Manager
University of Puget Sound
Tacoma, WA
253.879.2611
mediarelations@ups.edu
Dr. Patrick Derr
Philosophy, Medical Ethics and Health Policy
Clark University
Worcester, MA
508.793.7128
pderr@clarku.edu
Emilie Lorditch
American Institute of Physics
College Park, MD
301-209-3029
elorditc@aip.org
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