Controversial Fertility Treatments Focus on Eggs’ Power Plants
        
            By Jennifer Couzin-Frankel, 
                Science Magazine
             | 03. 30. 2015
        
                    
                                    
                    
                                                                                                                                    
                                                                            
                              
    
  
  
    
  
          
  
      
    
             
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      Derived   from bacteria, mitochondria are our cells’ energy-producing   powerhouses. Now, a Massachusetts company is convinced that these   microscopic cylinders are also key to conceiving a baby, and it has   persuaded several groups of physicians outside the United States to test   that controversial premise in women with fertility problems. More than   10 women are pregnant via the firm’s proprietary in vitro fertilization (IVF) method, which adds a bolus of a woman’s own mitochondria to her mature egg.
 
      Meanwhile, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has erected   roadblocks in front of a fertility specialist and a stem cell biologist   who want to clinically test the mitochondrial hypothesis in the United   States. The duo would like to harness a different IVF strategy: swapping   out a woman’s mitochondria by transferring chromosomes from her egg   into an egg from another woman. The technique, called mitochondrial   replacement therapy (MRT), was just legalized in the United Kingdom to prevent rare genetic diseases.   But even before that, the two researchers applied for permission to use   it in women who are struggling to conceive...
  
 
       
 
  
 
    
    
  
   
                        
                                                                                
                 
                                                    
                            
                                  
    
  
  
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