Chinese scientist criticized for risking lives of 'gene-edited' babies - Action News
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Science

Chinese scientist criticized for risking lives of 'gene-edited' babies

A leading geneticist who ran the conference where a Chinese scientist said he had made the world's first "gene-edited" babies condemned him Monday for potentially jeopardizing lives and having no biology training.

He Jiankui 'should certainly be stopped from doing anything like this again,' Robin Lovell-Badge says

In this 2018 photo, scientist He Jiankui speaks during an interview in Shenzhen in southern China. The Chinese government on Nov. 29, 2018, ordered a halt to work by a medical team that claimed to have helped make the world's first gene-edited babies. (Mark Schiefelbein/Associated Press)

A leading geneticist who ran the conference where a Chinese scientist said he had made the world's first "gene-edited" babies condemned him Monday for potentially jeopardizing lives and having no biology training.

Robin Lovell-Badge, organizer of the November 2018 event where China's He Jiankui made his controversial presentation, described him as a rich man with a "huge ego" who "wanted to do something he thinks will change the world."

He, associate professor at Southern University of Science and Technology in Shenzhen, China, sparked an international scientific and ethical row when he said he had used a technology known as CRISPR-Cas9 to alter the embryonic genes of twin girls born in November.

He could not be immediately reached to respond to Lovell-Badge's comments. Chinese authorities are investigating him and have meanwhile halted this kind of research.

In videos posted online and at the conference, He said he believed his gene editing would help protect the girls from infection with HIV, the virus that causes AIDS.

Lovell-Badge, a professor and gene expert at Britain's Francis Crick Institute who led the organizing committee for the November Human Genome Editing Summit at Hong Kong University, said it was impossible to know what He had actually done.

No one knows what these mutations will do.-RobinLovell-Badge, geneticist andorganizer of the November 2018 event

"If it's true [that he edited the genomes in the way he says]then it is certainly possible that he has put the children's lives at risk," he told journalists in London.

"No one knows what these mutations will do."

A microplate containing embryos that have been injected with Cas9 protein and PCSK9 sgRNA is seen in a laboratory in Shenzhen in southern China's Guangdong province on Oct. 9, 2018. (Mark Schiefelbein/Associated Press)

'Upto something'

Lovell-Badge said he originally invited He to the conference after hearing in scientific circles that he was "up to something." Lovell-Badge hoped that asking He to interact with specialists would encourage him to "control his urges."

"Pretty much everyone he talked to had said to him: 'Don't do it'," he said. "But clearly it was all too late."

He should certainly be stopped from doing anything like this again.-Lovell-Badge

Lovell-Badge said he learned of He's claims on the eve of the conference, and had an emergency meeting with him.

"He thought that he was doing good, and that what he was doing was the next big thing," Lovell-Badge said. But he had "no basic training in biology" and the experiments he said he had carried out "ignored all the norms of how you conduct any clinical trial or clinical experiment."

"He should certainly be stopped from doing anything like this again," he said.

Lovell-Badge said he had not heard from He since early December, but understood he was in Shenzhen in a guarded apartment during the probe.

Chinese authorities and institutions, as well as hundreds of international scientists, have condemned He and said any application of gene editing on human embryos for reproductive purposes was against the law and medical ethics of China.