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  • The Know Daily - Thursday 15 June 2023

The Know Daily - Thursday 15 June 2023

🔬Why everyone’s talking about a major scientific breakthrough

Read in 5m 30s ∙ Listening to Kirsty MacColl

🔬 A major breakthrough: Scientists have created synthetic human embryos using stem cells for the first time.

 đŸ“° News avoidance on the up: A report has found that more than a third of people globally say they sometimes or actively avoid the news.

🎓 University admissions: Officials have been spending just two minutes reading personal statements on average, according to a new survey.

Meet our latest travel bucket list item: a spectacular treetop walkway that opened last weekend in Norway’s Hamaren Activity Park, offering visitors panoramic views of the surrounding pine forest and lakes from 15 metres in the air. EFFEKT Architects designed the walkway to be accessible for people of all ages and physical abilities.

🔬 A historic scientific breakthrough

Scientists have created synthetic human embryos using stem cells in a major breakthrough which could aid research into genetic disorders but also raises ethical issues.

Tell me about the research.
Created without egg or sperm, these structures are at the very earliest stages of human development. They “do not have a beating heart or the beginnings of a brain, but include cells that would typically go on to form the placenta, yolk sac and the embryo itself,” explained The Guardian.

Professor Magdalena Zernicka-Goetz, from the University of Cambridge and California Institute of Technology, shared the development at the International Society for Stem Cell Research’s annual meeting in Boston on Wednesday.

Why is this such a big deal?
Scientists hope that these model embryos will aid research into genetic disorders and the biological causes of miscarriage.

Commenting on the findings, Professor James Briscoe from The Francis Crick Institute - who was not involved in the research - said the breakthrough could provide a “fundamental insight” into critical stages of human development.

What issues does it raise?
The research has sparked “critical legal and ethical questions”, said CNN, especially as many countries don’t currently have laws which govern “the creation or treatment of synthetic embryos”.

According to The Guardian, scientists are already moving to establish guidelines on the use of these embryo models.

Is there anything else I should know?
The synthetic embryos will not be used clinically anytime soon, and it would be illegal to implant them into a patient’s womb.

And, as Sky News pointed out, “it remains unknown whether the synthetic models could develop into viable embryos if implanted”.

đŸ™‹â€â™€ïž TRIVIA TIME

Duolingo and LinkedIn teamed up to survey more than 8,000 professionals around the world about the workplace jargon they find most confusing. But which of these expressions didn’t make the top five among UK workers?

A) Blue sky thinking
B) Low-hanging fruit
C) Shoot the breeze

Scroll to the bottom for the answer.

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