Scientists create test-tube human sperm from stem cells, but don’t know if it can make a baby
French researchers said they had patented a method to create sperm using stem cells harvested from infertile men - though they do not know if the lab-fabricated seed actually works.
Researchers with Kallistem had announced the discovery previously, but they and French government lab CNRS described how it works for the first time Thursday after taking out a patent on the process.
They have developed sperm from immature cells known as spermatogonial cells, which are present in all males, including pre-pubescent boys, and under normal conditions develop into sperm cells once puberty starts.
The sperm are “morphologically normal” (normal-looking), the researchers said. But it is not known whether the cells are up to the job of creating babies.
Philippe Durand, the chief Kallistem researcher, said the genesis of the research was indications that male fertility was declining, which he said could be attributed to environmental factors.
Since “at the heart of the problem is the interior of the testicle,” he said, that was what they first tried to replicate in the lab.