AR-News: Researchers give clone health warning
jim robertson
wolfcrest at hotmail.com
Fri Aug 8 17:06:09 EDT 2003
Researchers give clone health warning
By Pallab Ghosh
BBC science correspondent
As Italian scientists succeed in creating the world's first horse clone,
researchers in the UK have raised further questions about the future health
of such animals.
Apparently healthy, but for how long?
Scientists in Cambridge have found new evidence that the process of creating
an animal copy damages the genetic mechanisms that enable it to develop
normally.
The discovery explains why it takes hundreds of attempts to create a living
clone.
But it also has implications for the long-term health of these creatures.
Many leading cloning scientists are becoming increasingly concerned that
even apparently healthy animals may be flawed.
One scientist told the BBC that the death of Dolly the sheep last year was
probably just an indication of what was to come: that many more cow and
sheep clones would die as they approached middle age.
Subtle effects
It is well known that most clones are abnormal and do not make it to term.
What could happen is that the clone is born looking quite normal and its
early life is quite normal but later on these animals could develop all
sorts of diseases
Professor Wolf Reik
But the question has always been whether the supposedly healthy successful
clones have more subtle defects that only show up later. The new Cambridge
research shows this may well be the case.
The work involved producing a series of images illustrating how the signals
in an embryo tell its cells to develop properly.
The Cambridge team found that the signals in clone embryos were abnormal. In
most cases, these abnormalities prevent a clone from developing at all.
But Professor Wolf Reik, the head of the research team at the Babraham
Institute, believes that some defects may only become apparent in later
life.
Dolly suffered from premature arthritis
"What could happen is that the clone is born looking quite normal and its
early life is quite normal, but later on these animals could develop all
sorts of diseases," he told the BBC.
Dolly was created from an udder cell taken from an adult sheep.
The cell's genetic material was put inside an empty egg and given an
electric shock.
In Dolly's case, this created an embryo which, once implanted into a ewe,
led to a healthy lamb. But there were hundreds of failures on the way.
Most attempts did not produce viable embryos and there were some
miscarriages and deformed births.
It was obvious even then that the cloning process damaged the genetic
mechanisms of these failed clones.
Problems
There are now hundreds of animal clones, mostly cows such as those created
by the US cloning firm ACT. They are soon going to reach Dolly's age.
Have they had any problems yet? ACT's scientific director, Dr Robert Lanza,
says not.
But experiments by Professor Rudi Jaenisch of the Whitehead Institute for
Biomedical Research in Cambridge, Massachusetts, US, show that mice at least
have severe health problems as they get older.
Professor Reik believes his work backs Professor Jaenisch's.
Most of the animal clones in existence have been produced to develop medical
treatments.
So many scientists argue that a little suffering on the part of the clones
is worth the ultimate benefit to patients.
But with the prospect of horses being cloned purely for sport, Dolly the
sheep's creator Professor Ian Wilmut believes the time is now right for a
thorough and independent scientific programme to assess the harm posed to
animals by cloning.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/science/nature/3131255.stm
Cruelty to animals is one of the most significant vices of a low and ignoble
people.
Alexander von Humboldt
In wildness is the preservation of the world. Thoreau
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