I6 passages sur la reproduction d’une lignée de cellules souches embryonnaires humaines entre Israël et la France

Open Access
Authors
Publication date 2024
Journal Socio-Anthropologie
Volume | Issue number 49
Pages (from-to) 33-64
Organisations
  • Faculty of Social and Behavioural Sciences (FMG) - Amsterdam Institute for Social Science Research (AISSR)
Abstract
The first French clinical trial using human embryonic stem cells for regenerative purposes was launched in 2014, using the I6 stem cell line that was imported from Israel. From Israel to France, national reproductive policies and practices inform how basic scientists produce, manage and circulate cells across countries. Building on an interdisciplinary co-production involving two social scientists and a life scientist, this article suggests that biobanks passage cells from in vitro fertilization to stem cell science and from country to country by modifying their reproductive meaning. Four passages are described: the absence of cells in 2005 when the research started in France; the presence of supernumerary embryos available for research in Israeli IVF biobanks; the production of the I6 stem cell bank in Israel; the importation and laboratory biobanking of the cells in France. Human embryonic stem cell lines can never be completely disentangled from reproduction.

Document type Article
Note Article translated from English by Laurent Boscq and Noémie Merleau-Ponty. Original text : ‘I6 Passages: on the Reproduction of a Human Embryonic Stem Cell Line from Israel to France’, New Genetics and Society, 37/4, pp. 338-361, 2018. DOI : 10.1080/14636778.2018.1548269.
Language French
Published at https://doi.org/10.4000/11yy9
Downloads
merleau-ponty_SA49-2 (Submitted manuscript)
I6 passages (Final published version)
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