Genetically Modified Athletes

a book by Professor Andy Miah

Archive for the ‘GMA News’ Category

Gene doping could be next frontier for those seeking edge (2008, Dec 18)

Posted by Andy Miah on October 12, 2009

Gene doping could be next frontier for those seeking edge

By A.J. Perez, USA TODAY
WASHINGTON — From East German swimmers in the 1970s, to sprinter Ben Johnson in the 1980s, to clients of the Bay Area Laboratory Cooperative (BALCO) in recent years, athletes have sought an edge in a lab.
In the future, that lab might not produce a steroid or human growth hormone but genes that, for example, could alter the webbing of a swimmer’s hands and feet.

“We already have webbed hands and feet,” said Andy Miah, a lecturer at University of the West of Scotland. “It would just be a little bit more. What … could the world of sports do about that? Absolutely nothing, nor should they be able to.”

Gene doping, considered by many experts to be the next frontier for athletes seeking a biologic edge, was the central theme Thursday at a forum hosted by the American Enterprise Institute, a conservative think tank. The presenters agreed that doping on the cellular or molecular level likely is years away, and Miah was in the minority when it came to how it should be handled by sports governing bodies.

The World Anti-Doping Agency, which sets the rules on banned substances for Olympic sports, has outlawed gene doping — even though there’s no evidence it exists in sports, nor is there a test to detect it.

“It’s going to be difficult (to detect), but we will succeed in the long run,” said Theodore Friedman, a professor at the University of California-San Diego. “Whether WADA is ahead of the curve or not, time will tell. …You’re going to be looking for changes in a cell, not testing for a drug.”

Friedman said gene therapy is “an immature field” that’s had some “highly publicized setbacks” in treating disease. Still, U.S. Anti-Doping Agency CEO Travis Tygart said it’s good that the topic is getting attention before it becomes an issue in sports.

“This discussion is miles ahead of where we were pre-BALCO, when people were questioning the need for out-of-competition testing or research,” Tygart said. “It would be naive to think the demand is not there. If you rely on the experts who study the issue, we’re still several years away from it being a legitimate risk.”

Edwin Moses, one of the best hurdlers in history, said athletes likely won’t look to gene doping until they’re forced to.

“Most guys are still going to be using the (usual) techniques,” Moses said. “They will continue to be doing it as long as there are no tests used to detect it. Some will always (cut corners). It’s like those who drink and drive and think they can get home without getting caught. Whether it’s drugs or cheating for an exam, there are always going to be people who cheat.”

Then there’s the even more far-reaching notion of prospective parents potentially altering embryos to bring out the attributes more likely to produce an elite athlete.

“The direct manipulation of embryos or fetuses is far off in the future,” said ethicist Thomas Murray, president and CEO of the Hastings Center, a bioethics research institute. “I can’t imagine finding a good argument for parents to be allowed to do that. But if they did it anyway, what would we do to their children? It’s a disturbing prospect.”

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There are those who wonder if (gene) doping is OK (2008, Dec 18)

Posted by Andy Miah on October 12, 2009

There are those who wonder if (gene) doping is OK
By HOWARD FENDRICH – 15 hours ago
WASHINGTON (AP) — Gather a roomful of anti-doping experts, administrators, academics and athletes alike — something a conservative think tank did Thursday — and there is no consensus as to whether gene doping, thought by some to be the next frontier in Olympic cheating, is at hand.
Indeed, there isn’t even consensus on whether it would be a bad thing.
Turns out there is a school of thought — “pro-doping,” it’s called — that suggests anything athletes do to improve performance is OK, even, for example, manipulating DNA or surgically enlarging the webbing between fingers and toes in order to swim faster.
So says Andy Miah, who teaches at the University of the West of Scotland and was among about 10 panelists who participated in Thursday’s conference on “The Coming Age of the Uber-Athlete: What’s So Bad about Gene Enhancement and Doping?” at the American Enterprise Institute.
Gene doping, which is banned by the World Anti-Doping Agency, is a spin-off of gene therapy, which typically alters a person’s DNA to fight diseases.
Miah advocates “celebrating the value of performance enhancement,” he said.
“I don’t think a public health crisis would arise from enhancement technologies,” he added.
Miah said there is a growing group of professors around the world — “Four years ago, there were half as many people as now,” he noted — who back his “World Pro-Doping Agency” thought experiment. One of his premises is that sports wrongly are thought of as a separate entity, different from other pursuits or professions — music, art, medicine — where no one objects to, essentially, doing whatever one can to be the best one can be.
“We are more willing to embrace these enhancements, with the caveat that we need them to be safe enough,” he said. “We don’t all want to kill ourselves by using these things, but we are interested in exploring the realm of human embodiment that is beyond our current capabilities — and that might be cognitive, it might be physical. And I think that’s where sport isn’t quite at yet.”
Other speakers Thursday included Olympic champion hurdler Edwin Moses and U.S. Anti-Doping Agency CEO Travis Tygart, who believe gene doping should be banned, worry what it could do to athletes — and agree someone is likely to try eventually.
“How do you feel if it’s your son or your daughter who wants to be an Olympian? Would you let your kid or your grandchild take what they have to take? Or do what they have to do?” Moses asked.
On the other hand, he acknowledged there are those who will.
“If you have experts saying it’s realistic to turn on pieces of your metabolism and it becomes feasible for the athletes to do something without killing themselves and it’s not tremendously expensive, someone is going to try it,” said Moses, who won gold medals in 1976 and 1984 in the 400-meter hurdles. “There will be someone who can convince an athlete they can get away with it.”
For his part, Tygart believes “that risk is several years away,” he said. “And even if it comes, there would be the ability to detect it through the testing process.”
There were others present who were not so sure about either of those assessments.
John Leonard, executive director of the American Swimming Coaches Association, told of conversations he has had with coaches and scientists in China.
“We are really naive if we are to believe that the Chinese at this point are clean or that they are the only country in the world that is experimenting with genetic enhancement as we speak,” said Leonard, who was not a panelist but attended the conference and spoke during question-and-answer periods.
“There are lots of countries in the world who couldn’t care less about doing it safely, and there are lots of athletes who will take the chance that they will die in order to win medals. … Will the United States have the same viewpoint when we start losing gold medals?”
Theodore Friedmann, a professor at the University of California, San Diego, researches human gene therapy and spoke about the risks.
“People are injured. People die,” he said. “It should be reserved for treatment of people with serious diseases.”
He said he doesn’t know whether there are athletes attempting gene doping.
“Nobody knows,” he said, before adding: “It wouldn’t surprise me.”
About one thing Friedmann left no doubt, however: Unlike Miah, he thinks the practice has no place in sports.
“The anti-doping world accepts the notion that rules matter and, in fact, it reflects the wish of most athletes,” Friedmann said. “The world of pro-doping is the contrary of all that.”

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Make me a superhero: The pleasures and pitfalls of body enhancement (2009, May)

Posted by Andy Miah on October 8, 2009

Make me a superhero: The pleasures and pitfalls of body enhancement
We should welcome with open arms the rich possibilities of technologically enhancing our bodies. Just so long as we don’t all end up looking, and thinking, and acting the same

http://www.guardian.co.uk/science/2009/may/01/body-enhancement-cosmetic-surgery-genetics

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Athletes May Try Unproved Muscular Dystrophy Drug for an Edge (2008, March 11)

Posted by Andy Miah on October 8, 2009

Athletes May Try Unproved Muscular Dystrophy Drug for an Edge

By Curtis Eichelberger

<http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=photos&sid=ajKE6ZDs.iUI>
March 11 (Bloomberg) — Chris Rosa has spent 26 years in a wheelchair awaiting a treatment for his muscular dystrophy. Within the next five years, even before new drugs are approved for him, athletes may try using them to cheat, sports doping authorities and scientists say.

“I get angry about it,” said Dr. Se-Jin Lee, the Johns Hopkins University scientist who discovered a protein being developed for diseases including muscular dystrophy. “The scientific potential to make people’s lives vastly improved is incredible. And all we talk about is whether some athlete can use it to hit a baseball farther.”

Wyeth, Amgen Inc. and closely held Acceleron Pharma Inc. are experimenting with spurring muscle growth by suppressing a chemical called myostatin, found by Lee in 1997. Doing so would reverse atrophy caused by wasting illnesses and aging — and create a hard-to-detect, non-steroid shortcut for increasing the size of healthy tissues.

Agencies that police sports for performance-enhancing substances say myostatin blockers may reach athletes as soon as this year’s Olympics and certainly by 2012. The World Anti- Doping Agency <http://www.wada-ama.org/en/>  has banned them even before they have been fully tested. Meanwhile, that group and sports organizations including Major League Baseball are monitoring other treatments known as gene doping, in which cells are reprogrammed to enlarge muscles.

The Montreal-based anti-doping group, created in 1999, has already spent $6.5 million on finding ways to detect athletes using gene-altering technologies. The group plans to work with companies making myostatin inhibitors when trials are more advanced, according to Olivier Rabin, the agency’s science director.

Difficult to Detect

“We have to prepare ourselves for misuse in sport soon,” Rabin said in a telephone interview. Some athletes might try to use the new muscle-building medicines as soon as the 2012 Olympic Games in London, he said.

The new drugs may be particularly difficult to detect because they are injected directly into the targeted tissues and could be designed not to show up in urine and blood tests, researchers say.

As a U.S. House of Representatives subcommittee probed the use of steroids in professional sports, witnesses at hearings in January and February warned that next-generation drugs may enable athletes to rewrite record books.

“When we think we have a problem solved, there are chemists creating new problems,” said Bud Selig <http://search.bloomberg.com/search?q=Bud+Selig&site=wnews&client=wnews&proxystylesheet=wnews&output=xml_no_dtd&ie=UTF-8&oe=UTF-8&filter=p&getfields=wnnis&sort=date:D:S:d1> , the commissioner of Major League Baseball, told the House panel Jan. 15. Baseball “hired the best experts that we can” on gene doping, he said. Selig didn’t address myostatin blockers.

Muscular Dystrophy Victim

Drugs to inhibit myostatin are being developed to help patients like Rosa, 40, who is the director of student affairs at City University of New York. He was diagnosed with muscular dystrophy at age 14. He remembers spending childhood summers playing stickball in the shadows of New York’s Shea Stadium and the winters emulating St. John’s basketball player Chris Mullin <http://search.bloomberg.com/search?q=Chris+Mullin&site=wnews&client=wnews&proxystylesheet=wnews&output=xml_no_dtd&ie=UTF-8&oe=UTF-8&filter=p&getfields=wnnis&sort=date:D:S:d1> .

“I can’t dream about my future without worrying about how this disease might skew my life expectancy,” Rosa says.

In healthy people, muscle mass is determined by need. As exercise tears fibers, the cells instruct the tissues to rebuild themselves bigger and stronger to handle increased workload.

Patients like Rosa lose muscle and never rebuild it. The same process affects people with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, also called Lou Gehrig <http://search.bloomberg.com/search?q=Lou+Gehrig&site=wnews&client=wnews&proxystylesheet=wnews&output=xml_no_dtd&ie=UTF-8&oe=UTF-8&filter=p&getfields=wnnis&sort=date:D:S:d1> ’s disease, after the New York Yankees Hall of Fame baseball player whose career it ended. Others lose muscle as they age, affecting stability when walking.

In 1997, Lee at Johns Hopkins in Baltimore created mice lacking a gene to make the protein myostatin and showed that they developed more muscle. He and other scientists later showed that the substance regulates growth of the tissues. Michael Bloomberg, the majority owner of Bloomberg LP, is a former chairman of the Johns Hopkins board of trustees, and the university’s school of public health is named for him.

Wyeth, Amgen Trials

Wyeth <http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/quote?ticker=WYE%3AUS> , based in Madison, New Jersey, and Amgen <http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/quote?ticker=AMGN%3AUS> , based in Thousand Oaks, California, are testing myostatin blockers in humans. Neither company would discuss the drugs’ potential for abuse by athletes. “Amgen’s mission is to serve patients,” said spokeswoman Anne McNickle <http://search.bloomberg.com/search?q=Anne+McNickle&site=wnews&client=wnews&proxystylesheet=wnews&output=xml_no_dtd&ie=UTF-8&oe=UTF-8&filter=p&getfields=wnnis&sort=date:D:S:d1> .

Wyeth, the fifth-largest U.S. drugmaker, is developing MYO- 029, an antibody molecule that attaches specifically to myostatin and blocks the signal instructing muscles to stop growing. The results of an early study, with more than 100 patients in the U.S. and the U.K., will be published this year, said Michael Lampe, a Wyeth spokesman.

Amgen, the world’s largest biotechnology company, has started a safety trial for a myostatin blocker called AMG-745. McNickle declined to how say many patients are participating.

Acceleron, in Cambridge, Massachusetts, will begin safety trials this year for its myostatin treatment, ACE-031, said Steven Ertel, vice president of corporate development. Acceleron has reported that rodents given the substance had a 60 percent increase in muscle growth and primates, at least 10 percent.

Brazilian Bodybuilder

“What I care about are the 5-year-old children diagnosed with muscular dystrophy who will be in a wheelchair by 12 and oftentimes dead by their early 20s,” said John Knopf, Acceleron’s chief executive officer. “The focus here isn’t on athletes.”

Nonetheless, participants in sports are following the development of myostatin inhibitors. Lee, the Johns Hopkins School of Medicine molecular scientist, recalls putting down a test tube one day about two years ago to take a phone call from a Brazilian bodybuilder who had e-mailed for weeks with questions about the substances.

“I was explaining that we were still in the testing phases and that a drug Wyeth has in trials, and he interrupted me and said, `MYO-029?”’ Lee said during an interview at his laboratory. “He said, `I have some right here. I just want to know if it’s safe to take.”’

`Shocking Conversation’

“I warned him against taking something that hadn’t been thoroughly tested,” Lee said. “It was a shocking conversation.”

Geneticists Lee and Alexandra McPherron discovered myostatin when they were studying how cells send signals to each other. The material was one of the communicating molecules they identified. Lee later found that while the protein plays a predominant role in controlling muscle growth in mice, it is just one of many regulators in humans, and might not even be the most important, he says.

In Philadelphia, Dr. Lee Sweeney is developing a different, gene-based approach to increasing muscle mass. Sweeney, the chairman of the physiology department at the University of Pennsylvania’s School of Medicine, recalls watching his grandmother struggle with muscular atrophy in her final years, until she was unable to care for herself.

In the late 1990s, he injected mice with a synthetic gene that produced IGF-1, for insulin-like growth factor 1, and saw a 30 percent gain in muscle. Later, rodents were genetically engineered to overproduce IGF-1 in their skeletal muscle. These sedentary mice experienced increased muscle mass of as much as 50 percent. The substance instructs the tissues to grow.

`Had to Hang Up’

U.S. newspapers and magazines picked up on medical journal reports of his work, and football coaches started calling, Sweeney says. One offered his own athletes as test subjects.

“I kept telling them that my research had only been done on mice and that it could potentially kill a person,” Sweeney said. “I finally had to hang up on some of them.”

Sweeney’s research has graduated to dogs from mice. It’s a big step, because the dog’s immune system is more similar to that of a human, he says. Treatments that safely alter the muscle mass of a mouse might trigger a canine’s immune system to attack tissues injected with new genetic instructions.

That’s why the medicines aren’t yet safe enough for athletes or anyone else to try, Sweeney says. He worries that a rogue lab could be built for as little as $500,000 to turn out untested materials to meet athletes’ demands, he says.

“You have athletes out there who want to become champions so badly that they are willing to risk their health and their lives,” Sweeney says.

To contact the reporter on this story: Curtis Eichelberger <http://search.bloomberg.com/search?q=Curtis+Eichelberger&site=wnews&client=wnews&proxystylesheet=wnews&output=xml_no_dtd&ie=UTF-8&oe=UTF-8&filter=p&getfields=wnnis&sort=date:D:S:d1>  in Washington at ceichelberge@bloomberg.net

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Think performance enhancers are a problem now? Welcome to the era of the genetically engineered superathlete (2008, March 11)

Posted by Andy Miah on October 8, 2009

Think performance enhancers are a problem now? Welcome to the era of the genetically engineered superathlete

Tuesday March 11, 2008 12:27PM

By David Epstein
I am one of the most avid sports fans you’ll find,” Se-Jin Lee says. It’s true. He’ll watch anything. Basketball. Football. Fútbol. Billiards on channel seven-hundred-whatever. As a graduate student in the ’80s Lee used to sit in his car in the driveway with the radio on to listen to the games of faraway baseball teams. Even now, in his lab at Johns Hopkins Medical School in Baltimore, he easily rattles off the NCAA basketball tournament winners in order from 1964 to 2007. And, like anyone who values fair competition these days, he’s disturbed by the issue of performance-enhancing drugs in sports….

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GMA translation to Portuguese published in Brazil

Posted by Andy Miah on November 4, 2008

Last month, the Brazilian translation of Genetically Modified Athletes was published and can be accessed here:

http://www.phorte.com/shopping/product_enlarge.php?id=304

Em uma análise provocativa da ética e dos valores humanos esportivos, Atletas geneticamente modificados imagina
o admirável mundo novo do esporte. Examinando este novo problema ético em um momento crucial de sua teorização, o livro questiona a pedra fundamental das éticas esportiva e médica, perguntando se as autoridades do esporte podem, ou mesmo devem, protegê-lo da modificação genética.
O livro traz lado a lado estudos do esporte e bioética para desafiar nossa compreensão acerca dos valores que o definem. Sem afirmar que “tudo é permitido” na intensificação da performance esportiva, Atletas geneticamente modificados argumenta que é importante ser humano no esporte,
mas que a modificação genética não tem de pôr à prova essa qualidade.

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