A few weeks later, the scientist, He Jiankui, arrived in his office and dropped a bombshell. He said he had approval from a Chinese ethics board to create pregnancies using human embryos that he had genetically edited, a type of experiment that had never been carried out before and is illegal in many countries.
âI spent probably 40 minutes or so telling him in no uncertain terms how wrong that was, how reckless,â Porteus said in a recent interview.
Porteus did not report Heâs intentions to anyone, because he thought heâd talked him out of it and it wasnât clear where to report the plans of a scientist in China. Neither did two other American scientists He confided in.
Now, nearly two months after He shook the scientific world by announcing he had created the first genetically edited babies â twins, born in November â the worldâs major science and medical institutions are urgently trying to come up with international safeguards to keep such rogue experiments from happening again.
But while scientists around the world agree the nightmare scenario must be stopped, they disagree about how to do it. Even inventors of Crispr, the gene-editing tool He used, differ on the best approach.
Some scientists want a yearslong moratorium on creating pregnancies with gene-edited human embryos. Others say a moratorium would be too restrictive or unenforceable. Some think scientific journals should agree not to publish embryo-editing research. Others consider that misguided or ineffective.
But most agree major health and science institutions should act quickly. The World Health Organization is assembling a panel to develop global standards for governments to follow. Leaders of the National Academy of Medicine and the National Academy of Sciences in the United States, along with the Chinese Academy of Sciences, have jointly proposed a commission with academies in other countries to develop criteria so scientists canât âseek out convenient locales for conducting dangerous and unethical experimentation.â The proposal included establishing âan international mechanism that would enable scientists to raise concerns." The World Economic Forum in Davos has scheduled a discussion of the issue Thursday.
Enforcement would need to be done by individual countries, many of which already have relevant laws and regulations. But global standards set by scientists could give countries a big push.
The fear isnât just that genetically edited babies could develop unintended health problems that could be inherited by subsequent generations, or that there could be attempts to produce designer babies, genetically altered for physical features, intelligence or athletic prowess.
Scientists also worry about a backlash against less-controversial gene editing that doesnât involve embryos and has more potential to treat or prevent disease.
Not only did some American scientists know about Heâs intentions, one may have supported him. His former doctoral adviser at Rice University in Texas, Michael Deem, told The Associated Press he was present in China during the informed consent process with couples participating in the embryo-editing project.
Rice is investigating. Lawyers for Deem, who also told the AP he had âa small stakeâ in Heâs genomics companies, said: âMichael does not do human research and he did not do human research on this project.â
He and Deem havenât responded to emails from The New York Times. A Rice spokesman declined to offer any information on the universityâs investigation.
He, who is in his mid-30s, went public about his work in a video announcement in November, after it was revealed by MIT Technology Review just before a conference on genome editing in Hong Kong.
âI was just horrified; I felt kind of physically sick,â said Jennifer Doudna, a Crispr inventor, who first learned what He had done when he emailed her on Thanksgiving with the subject line âBabies Born."
He said he had disabled a gene in the embryos that allows people to become infected with HIV, something medically unnecessary because simpler and safer ways exist for preventing HIV.
Data he presented suggests the editing might have caused unintended genetic alterations with unknown health implications. There are serious doubts that He, who said he also created a second pregnancy that Chinese authorities said is still underway, ensured the babiesâ parents understood the risks of the editing.
Porteus says he now wishes heâd consulted with colleagues after he learned about Heâs plans and emailed a senior Chinese ethicist while He was in his office.
Another American He spoke to, Dr. William Hurlbut, a Stanford ethics professor, said he expressed strong opposition to the work in discussions with He in 2017 and 2018, warning him that, among other things, â'This could hurt you, this could humiliate you.' â
As of last October, Hurlbut said, âI was personally convinced that he had either implanted or had live births.â
He said he didnât notify anyone because âI decided it wasnât like I knew somebody was going to murder somebody; it was a fait accompli. I didnât feel like there was either any moral obligation or practical benefit to my raising it.â
Mark DeWitt at University of California, Berkeley, declined to be interviewed but has said he also tried to dissuade He.
All three American scientists noted He spoke to them expecting confidentiality, which is how scientists commonly share preliminary research.
If He had been working through U.S. universities or funding institutions, scientists could have alerted those, said Dr. Francis Collins, director of the National Institutes of Health, which doesnât fund human embryo editing. Chinaâs system is so complex that American scientists might not know âexactly what kind of alarm bells they should be ringing and who they should be ringing them to,â he said.
Efforts to come up with a coordinated international response gained momentum this week when Chinese authorities, often perceived to be more laissez-faire about reining in unorthodox scientific experiments, indicated that an initial government investigation found that He âseriously violatedâ state regulations, according to Chinese state media.
The findings â that he forged ethics documents, used unsafe and ineffective gene-editing methods and intentionally evaded supervision â suggest that he could face criminal charges. Heâs academic home, Southern University of Science and Technology in Shenzhen, rescinded his contract.
âIt is clear that the Chinese government is taking this issue seriously,â said Dr. Victor Dzau, president of the National Academy of Medicine in Washington.
Initially it was unknown whether He would face consequences. In recent years, China has invested millions aiming to become a scientific powerhouse, including money to lure back to China scientists like He, who did doctoral and postdoctoral work in the United States. Eye-popping experiments, like a proposal to transplant a head to another body, have not been discouraged.
âIt was vital for this dangerous and unwarranted work to be officially acknowledged and deemed illegal,â said Doudna after the announcement of the preliminary findings. âThis announcement confirms an international âred lineâ of ethical and scientific conduct to help ensure that this type of radical, medically unnecessary and negligent work does not happen again.â
While under investigation, He has been in faculty housing, able to roam campus, go to the gym and communicate with some Western scientists. Hurlbut has spoken to him by phone and email and said that in those conversations, He had sounded âhopeful that he can have a contributory future.â
Asked if He, who initially said he was âproudâ of what he had done, had expressed regret, Hurlbut replied: âHe really regrets the way it was revealed to the world, the timing."
He also recently emailed a British geneticist, Robin Lovell-Badge, saying: âI fully agree that scientists should draw up a clear set of dos and donâts for those who want to perform human gene editing.â
At least one major journal decided against publishing Heâs research before the Hong Kong announcement, and scientists have debated whether it should be published.
Porteus said he initially thought it should be posted on a forum that accepts early, not-yet-peer-reviewed research because âwe could go through it with a fine-tooth comb so we understand every detail.â But now, he said, âI donât even think that would be appropriate. Itâs so out of bounds, it canât be given any stamp of approval.â
Although He has said his motivation was protecting people from HIV, he also clearly wanted leading scientistsâ approval. Several months before the twinsâ birth, he asked to visit Feng Zhang, another Crispr inventor. At Zhangâs Broad Institute lab in Boston, He showed data from his gene-editing of human embryos in laboratory dishes, which didnât alarm Zhang because it had already been done by several scientists. But Zhang sharply criticized âbig problemsâ with Heâs gene-editing results.
He didnât say anything about implanting embryos. âMaybe I shouldnât have been so critical and he would have revealed more,â Zhang said.
Some experts say the best way to block misguided uses of embryo editing is coordinated action by all public and private players involved in new scientific technologies, including regulatory agencies, patent offices, funding organizations and liability insurers. In a recent New England Journal of Medicine article, R. Alta Charo, a bioethicist at University of Wisconsin-Madison, recommended a âcomprehensive ecosystem of public and private entities that can restrain the rogues among us.â
The first step may be an international commission, led by the U.S. academies of science and medicine, which many countries have now agreed to form, said Dzau, the academy of medicine president. It would produce a report this year setting detailed guidelines.
Current standards, reflected in a 2017 National Academies report, say edited embryos should only be used in human pregnancies to prevent or treat âserious diseases or disabilitiesâ with no âreasonable alternativeâ treatment. Dzau wants more specifics, like which diseases are dire enough to justify the risks, which risks are acceptable, and how much preliminary testing is required.
He said the commission might recommend a moratorium on implanting edited human embryos until it issues its report. Some leading scientists want a longer hiatus.
Zhang said a five-year moratorium would allow for necessary public discussion.
Doudna disagrees and instead supports developing âvery strict international criteriaâ and getting journals âto say they will not publish work like this.â
Sheâs been jousting over email with the NIHâs Collins, who leans toward a moratorium.
âIf you use the m-word, it has a little more clout,â Collins said, noting that international agreement would be required to lift it, discouraging individual countries from deciding, â'We think itâs OK now.'â
This article originally appeared in The New York Times.