Oblivion
Member
- Sep 6, 2024
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More evidence of the nutters playing God.
news.uga.edu
More and more men all over the world are finding out from their doctors that they are infertile. However, groundbreaking new stem cell research by scientists at the University of Georgia is offering up some serious hope for new clinical infertility therapies in the not-so-distant future.
The team used embryonic stem cells collected from rhesus macaque monkeys to produce immature sperm cells called round spermatids. From there, researchers were able to verify that those spermatids could fertilize a rhesus macaque egg.

A new breakthrough for treatment of male infertility
UGA study first to develop sperm cells from primate cells.
