http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/health/3189718.stmA controversial IVF technique could see babies being born with three parents, scientists have suggested.
Experts in China say they have created embryos using eggs from two women and sperm from one man.
The embryos were implanted into a 30-year-old Chinese women with fertility problems.
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Scientists at Sun Yat-Sen University, in Guangzhou, tried to overcome this problem by fusing the woman's egg with one from another woman.
Eggs consist of a nucleus which holds most of their DNA and surrounding material called the cytoplasm.
Scientists removed the DNA material from the donor egg leaving just the cytoplasm. They then put the nucleus of the patient's egg into the donor egg, in a process called human nuclear transfer
These fused eggs were then fertilised with the man's sperm. In all, the scientists transferred five of the three-parent embryos into the woman.
She subsequently became pregnant with triplets. One month into the pregnancy, doctors aborted one foetus to give the remaining two a better chance of survival.
However, the remaining two were both delivered prematurely and died at four and five months into the pregnancy respectively.
The scientists said the deaths were not related to the IVF technique they used, but rather due to complications as a result of a multiple pregnancy
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The technology behind the Chinese experiment was developed in the United States.
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