Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Emerging Tech
  3. Health & Fitness
  4. News

UC Davis biologists are trying to grow transplantable human organs inside of living pigs

Add as a preferred source on Google

While you yourself might be lucky enough to have all your limbs and organs, humanity as a whole is running out of body parts. The World Health Organization calls the shortage of transplantable organs “virtually a universal problem” due to legal and sociocultural factors in countries around the globe. Developed countries may meet demand better than the rest, but even so, patients here are still underserved.

United States scientists are now attempting unconventional means to meet this growing demand – with researchers from the University of California, Davis injecting human stem cells into the embryos of pigs, reports BBC. The results are human-pig chimeras, which remain in live sows for 28 days before the scientists terminate the pregnancy and remove the embryonic tissue for study. Humans and pigs have similar physiologies, which allows scientists to use swine in biomedical research and apply their findings to humans.

Recommended Videos

Here’s how the organ growing process works. Using a gene editing technique called CRISPR, scientists first remove the part of a freshly fertilized pig embryo’s DNA that instructs the fetus to grow a pancreas. Human stem cells –which are able to develop into any kind of tissue– would then be injected into the pig embryo and allowed to fill the gap created by the initial DNA removal. If all goes as planned, the embryo then grows into a human organ inside the pig.

If you have some concern about human-pig hybrids and animal testing, you’re not alone. In September, the United States’s National Institute of Health (NIH) said it would not fund any research “in which human pluripotent cells are introduced into non-human vertebrate animal pre-gastrulation stage embryos…” In other words, although the NIH may reconsider its position in the future, it refuses to participate in any current research that entails growing human organs in non-humans.

Meanwhile, organizations against animal testing and factory farming are unsettled by the research. “I’m nervous about opening up a new source of animal suffering,” Compassion in World Farming’s Peter Stevenson told the BBC. “Let’s first get many more people to donate organs. If there is still a shortage after that, we can consider using pigs, but on the basis that we eat less meat so that there is no overall increase in the number of pigs being used for human purposes.”

Dyllan Furness
Former Contributor
Dyllan Furness is a freelance writer from Florida. He covers strange science and emerging tech for Digital Trends, focusing…
DJI’s first 360° drone offers 8K video recording and a freakishly long transmission range
From omnidirectional obstacle sensing to 42 GB of onboard storage, the Avata 360 is DJI doing what DJI does best: raising the bar for everyone else.
DJI Avata 360° drone.

DJI has officially entered the 360° drone arena with the launch of the Avata 360. It’s the company’s first-ever fully immersive FPV drone, and a direct shot at the Antigravity A1, a rival built by an Insta360-incubated brand. Looks like the drone wars just got more interesting. 

What makes the Avata 360 worth looking at?

Read more
I transferred all my chats from other AI apps to Gemini — and it works flawlessly
Google Gemini Graphics Featured

You know that moment when AI assistants like ChatGPT, Gemini, or Claude suddenly lose the plot mid-conversation and start hallucinating like they’re absolutely sure they’re right? Yeah…it’s equal parts funny and painfully annoying. My usual reaction is switching between apps, hoping one of them gets it right. But the real problem is that I have to start over every single time. It feels like I’m stuck in a loop explaining my life story to different AIs, one after the other.

Now with Gemini, I can now jump in from other AI apps without that whole reset conversation. Finally, the Google gods have blessed us. I tried it out expecting the usual hiccups, but it was surprisingly smooth and quick.

Read more
Google expands Search Live globally with voice and camera AI
The feature is now available in 200+ countries with multilingual support
Google Search Live

Google is taking another big step toward turning Search into a full-blown AI assistant. The company has officially expanded Search Live globally, making the feature available in over 200 countries and territories, along with support for dozens of languages.

https://twitter.com/google/status/2037201891130523917

Read more