A landmark decision by UK's Department of Health has opened the door to controversial treatments for inherited diseases that use donated DNA from a second donor mother, despite fears it might lead to "designer babies".
The department announced that the UK government intends to publish draft regulations later this year in a public consultation about the in vitro fertilisation IVF-based techniques to eradicate Mitochondrial Diseases.
The new regulations to fertility law allowing the procedures will be issued for consultation and then debated in Parliament, the 'Sky News' reported.
The aim of the IVF treatments is to stamp out serious Mitochondrial Diseases which can be passed from a mother to her children.
More From This Section
Mitochondria replacement involves transferring nuclear genetic material from a mother's egg or embryo into a donor egg or embryo that has had its nuclear DNA removed so the embryo does not inherit the mitochondrial disease.
This would allow a woman carrying mitochondrial diseases to have healthy children.
"People who have it live with debilitating illness, and women who are affected face passing it on to their children. It's only right that we look to introduce this life-saving treatment as soon as we can," said Davies.
However, some groups believe the techniques are ethically questionable.
They fear the techniques will result in a tiny trace of DNA from the donor egg's mitochondria, effectively creating a baby with three genetic parents.