You might accept a human heart transplant (pictured) if it
saved your life, but what about a pig's? (SPL).
If
animal organs could be used to save our lives, will it mean we become a bit
less human? Frank Swain speculates
Imagine that your heart is failing. You desperately need a replacement.
Every day, your family waits nervously for a call from the hospital to say
they’ve found a donor. Then one day, the call comes through. In your excitement
you barely hear what the doctor on the other end of the line is telling you.
There’s something you should know, she says. The donor is not human. It’s a
pig.
That possibility crept a little closer last week, with the announcement
that a pig’s heart had survived over a year after it was transplanted to a
baboon. The work, led by Dr Muhammad Mohuiddin at the US National Heart, Lung
and Blood Institute in Bethesda, Maryland, supports the case of those who say
that animal organs could be used to help humans on long transplant waiting
lists.
Pig hearts are anatomically similar to ours - just one reason why they
make suitable donors (SPL)
Xenotransplantation – using animal tissues in humans – dates back to at
least 1682, when Dutch surgeon Job Janszoon van Meekeren reported that a
Russian soldier’s skull had been repaired with a fragment of bone from a dog.
Horrified church authorities ordered the removal of the graft, but it had
healed too well to be removed. Later, Alexis Carrel’s pioneering techniques for
suturing blood vessels paved the way for the first xenotransplanted organs in
1902, but it took until the 1960s for any meaningful progress, when surgeons had
limited success transplanting primate organs to humans. However most failed
within couple of months, and the patients died.
Today, however, primates are no longer considered viable donors, due to
issues such as disease transmission risk and the ethical considerations of
primate research. What’s more, the body would probably reject the organs. “The
major obstruction to xenotransplantation was the immunological rejection,” says
Mohuiddin.
Pigs, however, have proven to be better donors, at least in tests on
baboons. A pig’s heart is anatomically similar to a human, they pose less of a
disease risk and the animals grow quickly, making them an excellent substitute.
Crucially, by modifying a pig’s genetics, Mohuiddin was able to render the
transplanted hearts invisible to the baboon’s immune system. Two genetic tweaks
reduced the ability of the baboon’s immune cells to identify the heart as a
foreign body. A third added a gene that produces a human anti-clotting agent to
help counter immune system reactions that can be triggered by blood clots
forming around foreign tissue. Together, these changes allowed the heart to
survive far longer than previous attempts.
The value of pigs may rise if demand increases for their organs
(Thinkstock).
So, what would a world with animal organ transplants in humans look
like? Might we one day see farmers in overalls mucking out pens where pigs roll
in the hay and oink happily as they grow a stock of organs inside them? Perhaps
that doesn’t seem too different from the situation we have now. We have after
all been rearing pigs for their meat for thousands of years, and transplantable
pig hearts will probably sell for a good deal more than they currently fetches
as offal.
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