Scientists fully grow human eggs in lab

Human eggs have been fully grown in a laboratory for the first time in what scientists hope could be a breakthrough in improving fertility treatment.

Embryos are placed onto a CryoLeaf for freezing.

US and British scientists have fully grown human eggs in a laboratory for the first time (File). (AAP)

Scientists have succeeded for the first time in growing human eggs in a laboratory from the earliest stages in ovarian tissue all the way to full maturity - a step that had previously been taken in mice.

Publishing their result in the journal Molecular Human Reproduction on Friday, scientists from Britain and the US said it could one day help in developing regenerative medicine therapies and new infertility treatments.

In previous studies, scientists had developed mouse eggs in a laboratory to the stage where they produced live offspring and had also matured human eggs from a relatively late stage of development.

This latest work, by scientists at two research hospitals in Edinburgh and the Center for Human Reproduction in New York, is the first time human eggs have been developed outside the human body from their earliest stage to full maturity.

"Being able to fully develop human eggs in the lab could widen the scope of available fertility treatments. We are now working on optimising the conditions that support egg development in this way and studying how healthy they are," said Evelyn Telfer, who co-led the work.

Independent experts not directly involved in this work praised it as important but also cautioned there was much more to do before lab-grown human eggs could be safely be made ready for fertilisation with sperm.

Darren Griffin, a genetics professor at Kent University in the UK, said the work was "an impressive technical achievement".

If success and safety rates were improved, he said, it could in future help cancer patients wishing to preserve their fertility while undergoing chemotherapy treatment, improve fertility treatments, and deepen scientific understanding of the biology of the earliest stages of human life.


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Source: AAP


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