Infertile men may be able to 'grow their own sperm' opening the door to fatherhood for thousands



Scientists have used artificial sperm to restore fertility in a breakthrough that could allow thousands of men to fulfil their dream of fatherhood.

In ‘hugely exciting’ experiments, they have made sperm from scratch, and, for the first time, succeeded in using it to produce healthy young.

Remarkably, the baby mice in the experiments went on to have offspring themselves. The landmark research paves the way for new drugs for infertility, the heartbreaking but little-understood condition that affects one in six couples.

Fresh hope: Sperm were artificially created in a breakthrough experiment which raises ethical questions. Here a sperm approaches an egg

Men left sterile by cancer treatment could also one day ‘grow their own sperm’.

But it also opens a Pandora’s box of ethical dilemmas. Possibilities raised range from men being made ‘redundant’ from the process of creating life, to babies being created through entirely artificial means.

Critics also question whether it is right to meddle with the building blocks of life just to allow couples to satisfy their desire to have children.

Scientists have been trying for years to coax embryonic stem cells – ‘master cells’ widely seen as a repair kit for the body – into turning into sperm.

They have had some success but any mice that became pregnant by such means gave birth to unhealthy offspring that quickly died.

Now, Japanese scientists have come up with a series of steps that appear to solve the problem.

They started with stem cells taken from mouse embryos in the first days of life and, using a cocktail of chemicals and vitamins, turned them into sperm in the earliest stages of development. These were then transplanted into the testicles of infertile mice, where they grew into fully-functional sperm.

The ‘artificial sperm’ were then used to fertilise eggs, leading to the birth of 60 ‘grossly healthy’ baby mice, who went on to have families of their own, the journal Cell reports.

The Kyoto University researchers hope to be able to repeat their success using slivers of skin as starting material, allowing men to father children that are genetically their own.

They also want to try to create eggs. Unlocking the secrets of sperm and egg production could also lead to ‘miracle’ pills that boost fertility and help millions of couples.

Defects in sperm and egg development are the biggest cause of infertility but, because many stages occur in the womb, scientists have struggled to study the process in detail.

Fresh hope: Infertility problems affect one in six couples and the breakthrough could give fresh hope for them

Researcher Dr Mitinori Saitou cautioned that much more work needed to be done before the process was applied to people.

He told the Daily Mail: ‘Our work is still a purely scientific achievement using the mouse and the application of this work to human material involves a lot of more work, time and ethical discussion.’

Allan Pacey, a Sheffield University expert in male fertility, said: ‘This is quite a step forward in developing a process by which sperm could be made for infertile men. It’s hugely exciting.’

Dr Peter Saunders, of the Christian Medical Fellowship, said the research ‘raises huge ethical issues’.

Josephine Quintavalle, of campaign group Comment on Reproductive Ethics, said the work was ‘total narcissism’ and raised the possibility of ‘male eggs’ from men’s skin and ‘female sperm’ from women’s skin.