Genetic Modification of Animals: Scientific and Ethical Issues

Jarrod Bailey
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引用次数: 10

Abstract

The scientific method demands a willingness to correct and integrate previ­ ous knowledge, based on observable, empirical, measurable evidence and subject to laws of reasoning; yet, it has scarcely been applied to non-human animal (hereinafter referred to as animal) research. Nevertheless, animal use in science started declining in the mid 1970s, at least in the United King­ dom, resulting in a drop in the number of animals used approaching 50% be­ tween the mid-197os and mid 1980s (uK Home Office, 2016)-perhaps a tacit admission of problematic species differences that render animals poor models for humans. This trend was, however, reversed with the advent of genetically modified (GM) animals, animals whose genetic material has been deliberately altered in some way by insertion, deletion, or substitution of DNA. While the decline in use of non-GM animals continued steeply well into the new millen­ nium, overall numbers have been rising for some time, solely due to increased utilization of GM animals ( Ormandy, Schuppli and Weary, 2009 ). UK statistics for 2015 show that more than two million procedures involved the creation and breeding of GM animals, who were not subsequently used in further research (around 50% of the total); and there were 720,000 procedures on GM animals in further experiments, representing 35°/o of the total animals used in actual experiments (Hendriksen and Spielmann, 2014; UK Home Office, 2016). Trends in GM animal use for the rest of the world are difficult to determine due to different reporting requirements, but they are likely to be similar, with up to 50% of the approximately 13 million animals used annually in research in the European Union (Eu) (Taylor and Rego, 2016), and the estimated 115 million animals used globally (Taylor et al., 2008). This chapter aims to summarize and analyze this shift in the use of animals in experiments and, without being overly technical, to ask critically why GM
动物基因改造:科学和伦理问题
科学的方法要求人们愿意根据可观察到的、经验的、可测量的证据并服从推理规律来纠正和整合以前的知识;然而,它很少应用于非人类动物(以下简称动物)的研究。然而,至少在英国,动物在科学领域的使用从20世纪70年代中期开始下降,导致动物的使用数量在20世纪70年代中期到80年代中期下降了近50%(英国内政部,2016年)——这可能是对物种差异问题的默认,这些差异使动物成为人类的不良模型。然而,随着转基因动物的出现,这种趋势被逆转了。转基因动物的遗传物质通过插入、删除或替代DNA的方式被故意改变。虽然非转基因动物的使用持续急剧下降,但由于转基因动物的使用增加,总体数量在一段时间内一直在上升(Ormandy, Schuppli和Weary, 2009)。英国2015年的统计数据显示,超过200万例涉及转基因动物的创造和繁殖,这些动物随后没有用于进一步的研究(约占总数的50%);在进一步的实验中,有72万只转基因动物,占实际实验中使用动物总数的35°/o (Hendriksen和Spielmann, 2014;英国内政部,2016)。由于不同的报告要求,很难确定世界其他地区使用转基因动物的趋势,但它们可能是相似的,欧盟(Eu)每年用于研究的约1300万只动物中有多达50% (Taylor和Rego, 2016),而全球使用的动物估计为1.15亿只(Taylor等人,2008)。本章旨在总结和分析这种在实验中使用动物的转变,并在不过于技术性的情况下,批判性地询问为什么是转基因
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