Pushing the Chimeric Envelope
Can this really comfort us? Is there any question that scientists may push the envelope as far as they can, from 0.1 percent to 1 percent to 10 percent? Why not 100 percent?
Sadly, it looks like this may have become true sooner than I thought. It was reported this week that Esmail Zanjani at the University of Nevada has created the first human-sheep chimera, with 15% human cells. That’s right: the decimal point is to the right of the five.
The biomedical rationale for this research is to create animals with organs that could be transplanted into humans. Given the significant number of people waiting for organ transplants, this is surely a laudable goal. Yet substantial ethical considerations still remain.
As these procedures advance and transplanting organs from chimeras to humans becomes more feasible, the proportion of human cells may come to rival the number of animal cells. And we currently don’t even have the language to think about these animals’ social and legal standing, let alone any public policies to govern this research or these organs’ use.
So now we face ethical questions about harvesting human body parts from partial as well as from full humans. How to assess this is a difficult question that deserves more thought than this blog post. What is clear, however, is that mutton lovers might want to eat up now. Their favorite dish may soon be regarded as a form of cannibalism.