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LONDON - BRITISH scientists have created human embryos touted as having 'three parents', in a breakthrough they hope could lead to effective treatments for a range of serious hereditary diseases.
Newcastle University researchers believe the process will help avoid passing on to offspring defective mitochondria genes contained outside the nucleus in a normal female egg.
Mitochondria are a cell's energy source, but mistakes in their genetic code can result in serious diseases such as epilepsy, strokes and mental retardation.
The researchers used a normal embryo created from a man and a woman who had defective mitochondria in her egg.
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