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S.Korean scientists create world's first cloned dog

 
 
Reply Wed 3 Aug, 2005 11:29 am
S.Korean scientists create world's first cloned dog
By Jon Herskovitz
With additional reporting by Maggie Fox in Washington

Man can now reproduce his best friend -- South Korean scientists announced on Wednesday they had created the world's first cloned dog.

Woo-Suk Hwang and his team of researchers at Seoul National University made world headlines earlier this year when they created stem cells with a patient's specific genetic material, derived through cloned embryos.

Now they have cemented their place as leaders in the field by creating Snuppy, the first dog cloned from adult cells by somatic nuclear cell transfer. This is the same technique used to create Dolly, the world's first cloned mammal, and other animals.

Hwang said the breakthrough in cloning dogs may advance work on combating diseases by therapeutic cloning with stem cells.

"Our research goal is to produce cloned dogs for (studying) the disease models, not only for humans, but also for animals," Hwang told a press conference.

Snuppy, short for Seoul National University puppy, where Hwang's lab is located, is a male born by caesarean section weighing 530 grams (19 ounces) on April 24 after a normal, full-term pregnancy in a yellow Labrador surrogate mother.

The second puppy, NT-2, weighed in at 550 grams (19.4 ounces) but died 22 days later from pneumonia. A post-mortem exam showed there were no anatomical problems with the dog that died.

A total of 1,095 reconstructed embryos were transferred into 123 surrogates to create the two dogs -- an efficiency rate of 1.6 percent.

Both puppies were created from an adult skin cell taken from a male Afghan hound using somatic cell nuclear transfer. Sheep, mice, cows, goats, pigs, rabbits, cats, a mule and horse have been cloned in the same way.

The Afghan breed was selected mainly for its size and striking appearance, researchers said.

"The purpose of this research is to produce research animals, not domestic pets," the research team said in a statement.

They said the difficulty in producing dog clones "underscores the importance of responsible regulation of this vital science."

CANINE DIFFICULTY

The scientists believe the ability to clone dogs will help to determine environmental and genetic contributions to traits of different breeds and could also help preserve rare species.

Scientist Gerald Schatten, who participated in the study, said cloning dogs may help scientists study diseases that affect dogs as well as humans such as cancer and diabetes. Therapeutic stem cell techniques for diseases could be tested in dogs and then used to treat humans, he said.

"By learning whether it is safe and effective in our (pet) companions, we may also know whether it is safe and effective for our loved ones," said Schatten, a medical researcher at the University of Pittsburgh.

Therapeutic cloning involves creating embryos for a supply of stem cells to be used for research or therapy to develop cures diseases ranging from diabetes to Parkinson. Stem cells are master cells that can be coaxed to develop in any cell tissue type in the body.

It has taken scientists longer to clone a dog than other animals because of the difficulty in producing mature, unfertilized canine eggs in the laboratory.

Unlike other mammals, dog eggs are released earlier from the ovary than in other species. Instead of maturing the eggs in the lab, the researchers overcame the problem by collecting mature eggs from the dogs.

Their achievement is reported in the science journal Nature.

The egg's genetic material was removed and replaced with the nucleus of the skin cell from a male Afghan hound, then fused to create an embryo, which was implanted into a surrogate mother at the correct time to coincide with the embryo development.

Some scientists cautioned there are many unresolved ethical questions about where the science may lead.

"Techniques that advance our understanding of diseases and their therapy are to be encouraged but cloning of animals raises many ethical and moral issues that have still to be properly debated within the profession," Freda Scott-Park, President-Elect of the British Veterinary Association said in a statement.
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Type: Discussion • Score: 1 • Views: 660 • Replies: 8
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Setanta
 
  1  
Reply Wed 3 Aug, 2005 11:53 am
They must want to increase their food stocks . . .
0 Replies
 
BumbleBeeBoogie
 
  1  
Reply Wed 3 Aug, 2005 12:10 pm
Set
Setanta wrote:
They must want to increase their food stocks . . .


AWK!
0 Replies
 
Setanta
 
  1  
Reply Wed 3 Aug, 2005 12:11 pm
Kai-gogi is not an uncommon dish there . . .
0 Replies
 
BumbleBeeBoogie
 
  1  
Reply Wed 3 Aug, 2005 12:17 pm
Set
Setanta wrote:
Kai-gogi is not an uncommon dish there . . .


Please don't tell me dog tastes like chicken.

BBB
0 Replies
 
Setanta
 
  1  
Reply Wed 3 Aug, 2005 12:58 pm
No, it tastes more like beef, but it is awfully stringy . . .
0 Replies
 
BumbleBeeBoogie
 
  1  
Reply Wed 3 Aug, 2005 01:44 pm
BBB
Setanta wrote:
No, it tastes more like beef, but it is awfully stringy . . .


AWK! AWK!!!
0 Replies
 
Setanta
 
  1  
Reply Wed 3 Aug, 2005 06:27 pm
OK, i'll stop . . .
0 Replies
 
Reyn
 
  1  
Reply Wed 3 Aug, 2005 10:56 pm
Cloned dog raises ethics, policy issues
Duplicating man's best friend may draw more public concern

By Robert Roy Britt
LiveScience
Updated: 4:05 p.m. ET Aug. 3, 2005

The first successful cloning of a dog, announced today, raises ethical issues and interesting questions about the crossroads of science and policy.

The breakthrough may lead to new research in canine stem cells that could ultimately prolong dogs' lives.

Yet given that President Bush is trying to block human stem cell research, the success raises the possibility that dogs will live longer while their owners die of diseases that stem cell research aims to cure, said the Executive Director of the Genetics Policy Institute, Bernard Siegel, who was not involved in the research.

"We could have this incredible and strange paradox where our pets might benefit from this research but human beings could not," Siegel told LiveScience in a telephone interview.

Not for pets
The cloning effort was led by Woo Suk Hwang of Seoul National University in South Korea and is reported in the Aug. 4 issue of the journal Nature. Hwang gained notoriety last year when he announced he had derived stem cells from a cloned human embryo.

The dog is called Snuppy, a name that draws from the university's initials. It's now 13 weeks old.

Snuppy was carried by a yellow Labrador surrogate mother and delivered by caesarian section. He joins a brotherhood of cloned animals that includes mice, cows, goats, pigs, rabbits and a mule, all of which owe their existence to the first Xeroxed animal, Dolly, the sheep.

Last year, the first cloned-to-order cat in the United States was sold in December. Your best friend, however, is not likely to be cloned anytime soon.

"This is not for cloning your pets," Siegel said. "This is an important piece of animal research." Siegel added just as stem cell research, the heart of the cloning effort, can be used to explore human disease, so can it be applied to veterinarian medicine.

Embryonic stem cells are unique cells that create all the cells of a living thing, from nerves to bone and muscle. Stem cell researchers hope to gain control over what the cells become, in attempts to cure from intractable diseases like diabetes and Parkinson's.

While the White House would prevent new lines of stem cells being used for research, scientists around the world are aggressively pursuing the work. Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist, who had sided with Bush on the issue, last week jumped ship and backed House-passed legislation to expand federal financing for human embryonic stem cell research.

What will people think?
Canines are difficult to clone because their eggs are released from the ovary earlier than in other mammals. The work is "much more of a challenge," said Randall Prather, a professor of reproductive biotechnology at the University of Missouri-Columbia. Prather, who did not participate in the effort, said the eggs could not be matured in the lab as with other cloned animals, and so had to be removed at exactly the right stage of maturity.

The scientists removed eggs, then took out the genetic material and replaced it with a cell nucleus taken from the skin on an Afghan hound's ear.

It took 123 tries to create two puppies. The other one died of pneumonia in 22 days.

Siegel is curious to see how the public will react.

"It's one thing to clone livestock and lab mice, but when you clone a dog it's going to resonate," he said. "Dogs are man's best friend and have a special place in most cultures."

Laurie Zoloth, a professor of medical humanities, bioethics and religion at Northwestern University, said some people will be against the cloning of dogs because they are against any form of animal research. But, she said in an email interview, animal experimentation has lead to many real cures that save human lives.

Zoloth and others see canine cloning as assisting the effort to understand human stem cells.

"This sort of work is a necessary first step to creating human stem cell lines and using them," she said.

Asked if dog duplication and other cloning advances might eventually lead people to be less averse to the idea of human cloning, Zoloth said no. "It is hard to imagine a way to set up the first safe, ethical experiment [on humans], she said. "The rates of risk to the mother, and to the baby would be unacceptable."

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