For the first time in the UK, a baby was born using three people’s DNA, according to the fertility regulator.
The majority of their DNA comes from their two parents, with only 0.1% coming from a third, donor lady.
The ground-breaking technology aims to prevent children from being born with catastrophic mitochondrial disorders.
Up to five of these babies have been born, but no further information has been published.
Mitochondrial disorders are deadly and can occur within days or even hours of birth. Some families have lost several children, and this procedure is viewed as their sole hope of having a healthy kid of their own.
Mitochondria are small compartments found inside nearly every cell that turn food into usable energy.
Defective mitochondria fail to provide energy to the body, resulting in brain damage, muscle wasting, heart failure, and blindness.
The UK’s first ‘three-person babies’ have been approved.
They are only passed on by the mother. So mitochondrial donation treatment is a modified kind of IVF in which mitochondria from a healthy donor egg are used.
However, mitochondria carry their own genetic information or DNA, thus the resulting children technically acquire DNA from both parents and a smidgeon from the donor. This is a long-lasting modification that will be passed down through generations.
This donor DNA is solely important for producing functional mitochondria; it has no effect on other features like as appearance, therefore thus does not constitute a “third parent.”
The procedure was pioneered in Newcastle, and in 2015, rules were passed in the United Kingdom to allow the creation of such newborns.
However, the UK did not proceed immediately. In 2016, the first baby born using this procedure was to a Jordanian family receiving treatment in the United States.
According to the Human Fertilisation and Embryology Authority (HFEA), “less than five” kids have been delivered as of 20 April 2023. It does not provide accurate numbers to avoid identifying the families.
The Guardian newspaper obtained these restricted facts through a Freedom of Information request.
“The news that a small number of babies have now been born in the UK with donated mitochondria is the next step in what will most likely remain a slow and cautious process of assessing and refining mitochondrial donation,” said Sarah Norcross, director of the Progress Educational Trust.
There has been no news from the Newcastle teams, so it is unclear whether the strategy was successful.
Prof Robin Lovell-Badge of the Francis Crick Research Institute commented, “It will be interesting to know how well the mitochondrial replacement therapy technique worked on a practical level, whether the babies are free of mitochondrial disease, and whether there is any risk of them developing problems later in life.”
Technically, there is a possibility of “reversion,” in which any damaged mitochondria that are carried over could multiply and cause disease.
It was formerly thought that up to 150 such babies could be born in the UK each year.