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Topic Name: Cloning from Adult DNA
Category: Biomedical
Research persons: Professor Ian Wilmut
Location: Roslin, Midlothian EH25 9PS, United Kingdom
Details
Udderly amazing. Scientists have for the first time used
DNA from an adult mammal -- specifically, genetic material from cells in the
mammary glands of a 6-year-old ewe -- to create a genetic duplicate. This clone,
a healthy lamb named Dolly, was born last July, Ian Wilmut of the Roslin
Institute in Edinburgh, Scotland, and his colleagues announce in the Feb. 27
Nature.
The spectacular feat builds upon cloning research dating back to the early
1980s. At that time, scientists developed a procedure called nuclear transfer
that enables them to replace the DNA-containing nucleus of an egg cell with a
nucleus from another cell. Researchers soon found that the altered egg could
develop into a clone of the animal that provided the nucleus -- but only if the
nucleus came from a cell of a barely developed embryo. Cloning attempts using
nuclei from adult animals invariably failed.
Last year, Wilmut and his coworkers described a modified nuclear transfer
method that allowed them to clone sheep from older embryonic cells
(SN: 3/9/96, p.
148). By maintaining the intended donor cells in a nutrient-deprived medium,
the scientists forced the cells out of their normal growth cycle and into a
quiescent stage called G0. For reasons still under study, nuclei from these
cells are more readily accepted by eggs.
With the birth of Dolly, Wilmut's group has now proved that at least some
adult cells prepared in the same manner can generate a viable clone when their
nuclei are transferred to eggs.
Many biologists had concluded that this was impossible, speculating that the
DNA inside the nuclei of adult cells undergoes irreversible changes as the cells
mature into the specialized roles they perform -- secreting milk, for example.
Yet Dolly's birth shows that the DNA in an adult nucleus either reprograms
itself or is open to reprogramming by factors in the egg.
Exactly how the adult DNA changes once inside the egg is one of many
fundamental biology questions raised by the birth of Dolly. The clone may also
provide insight into whether a nucleus harbors a genetic clock that determines
how old an organism is.
"Our 7-month-old lamb actually has a 6-year, 7-month-old nucleus in all her
cells. It's going to be interesting to see what happens with the aging of this
animal," notes Grahame Bulfield, director of the Roslin Institute.
More immediate research priorities, he says, are to determine whether other
types of adult cells -- liver, muscle, or brain cells, for example -- can also
generate clones, whether the same cloning process works in cattle and pigs, and
whether researchers can add or delete genes from the donor cells before
generating clones from them.
The latter issue will be key to the scientists' goals of using cloning to
create animals that produce valuable pharmaceuticals in their milk or whose
organs can be transplanted into people without being rejected.
Dolly's birth has also generated a predictable debate about the feasibility
and morality of cloning humans. In response, President Bill Clinton has directed
the new National Bioethics Advisory Commission to prepare a report examining the
ramifications of the Scottish cloning technology.
"It's a pretty shocking change in the way we have to think about biology,"
observes Jeffrey Kahn, director of the Center for Bioethics at the University of
Minnesota in Minneapolis.
References:
Stewart, C. 1997. An udder way of making lambs. Nature 385(Feb. 27):769.
Wilmut, I., et al. 1997. Viable offspring derived from fetal and adult
mammalian cells. Nature 385(Feb. 27):810. Available at
http://www.nature.com/.
Further Readings:
Adler, T. 1996. Bidding Bye-Bye to the Black
Sheep? Science News 149(Mar. 9):148.
Campbell, K., et al. 1996. Sheep cloned by nuclear transfer from a cultured cell
line. Nature 380(March 7):64.
Solter, D., 1996. Lambing by nuclear transfer. Nature 380(March 7):24.
For an interview with Ian Wilmut, who headed the cloning effort, go to
http://www.salonmagazine.com/feb97/news/news2.html
About
Researcher:
Ian Wilmut
Roslin Institute (Edinburgh)
Roslin, Midlothian EH25 9PS
United Kingdom
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