Ancient Cave Bear DNA Extracted and Decoded 130
diamond writes "The BBC reports that 'scientists have extracted and decoded the DNA of a cave bear that died 40,000 years ago.' The sequencing technique could also work for Neanderthals. However, 'the idea of obtaining DNA from dinosaurs, depicted in the film Jurassic Park, remains science fiction.' Also reported by Nature Magazine."
Outstanding (Score:2)
Re:Outstanding (Score:2)
Ancient Cave Beer? (Score:1)
They've got your Ancient Cave Beer (Score:1)
Re:Ancient Cave Beer? (Score:2, Funny)
What A Shame! (Score:3, Funny)
Yes, what a shame. Unfortunately because of limitations with current technology and scientific knowledge, we won't be able to reproduce a race of ancient evil uber bears bent on destroying humans and swiping pic-a-nic baskets.
Cue the "I welcome our new Ancient Bear Overlords" comments.....
Re:What A Shame! (Score:2)
They will be helped by the right to arm bears!
Re:What A Shame! (Score:1)
http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/tg/detail/-/067
Re:What A Shame! (Score:4, Funny)
Re:What A Shame! (Score:4, Funny)
*ahem* That's... (Score:1)
Unless they get genetically engineered to defeat me in a real-life King of Iron Fist Tournament or something. Or take my picnic baskets.
Re:What A Shame! (Score:2)
Re:What A Shame! (Score:3, Insightful)
It's like having the source code for Win2k, gcc (instead of MSVC and what not) and no build tools. With enough effort, you can compile it, but it's a long, arduous task, and you're unlikely to get the same end result.
Re:What A Shame! (Score:2)
Re:What A Shame! (Score:4, Funny)
So, what you're saying is... they didn't quite extract the bear necessities?
Re:What A Shame! (Score:1)
Is the pope a catholic?
Do Ancient Bear Overlords shit in the woods or the caves?
Re:What A Shame! (Score:1)
Yes.
Re:What A Shame! (Score:1)
Re:What A Shame! (Score:2, Interesting)
Should save the NFL a lot of money.... (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Should save the NFL a lot of money.... (Score:2)
Re:Should save the NFL a lot of money.... (Score:2)
I grew up on this football [ev1.net] when I kid. Linebacker, quarterback, who cares in this game.
How long... (Score:3, Funny)
Re:How long... (Score:2)
Starbuck crash lands on a mysterious planet and finds the lost tribe too busy making and drinking Cave Beer to ever care about ever reaching Earth. Starbuck must the fateful decision that will determine the fleet's survival: Drink it cold or warm?
way to go (Score:2)
Re:way to go (Score:2)
*evil villianous laugh* (Score:3, Funny)
Now, we just need to combine the two! Neanderthal bears!
... what?
Already combined! (Score:2)
>
>Now, we just need to combine the two! Neanderthal bears!
Og homo sapiens sapiens. Og not have to outrun homo sapiens neanderthalis. Og only have to outrun cave bear. Og wise. Great-great-gr[skipping a bit]eat-grandchildren Og now see just how wise.
Oblig SNL reference (Score:2)
Re:*evil villianous laugh* (Score:2)
You got bear in my neanderthal!
You got neanderthal in my bear!
Two great tastes that go together.
Jurassic Park (Score:1)
Can someone explain this further? What exactly about obtaining DNA from dinosaurs as depicted in Jurasic Park is "science fiction"?
I mean, for one thing, they didn't obtain the DNA from dinosaurs. They obtained (as I recall) dinosaur DNA from a mosquito that was preserved in amber. What exactly is science fiction about obtaining DNA from a very-well preserved creature encased in something like amber?
Jus
Re:Jurassic Park (Score:2)
Now imagine trying the same thing on the dessicated remains of a misquito gut. Think their might be some comtamination in there? Putting aside the issue of a 40,000 year old sample versus a 180 million year old sample.
Re:Jurassic Park (Score:1)
Old fossils and the like do not always have DNA that is recoverable in any easy way. DNA degrades easily, breaks into bits, etc.
Cave Bears existed alongside modern (genetically speaking) man. Dinosaurs are much, much older and therefore that much harder to get DNA from.
Re:Jurassic Park (Score:1)
Okay, properly sequencing dinosaur DNA might be science fiction in that vain, for some time in the future, but sequencing is different than obtaining.
More than that. (Score:2)
Re:Jurassic Park (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Jurassic Park (Score:2)
With a large enough fragment database - absolutely huge if your DNA is very fragmented and contaminated - it should be possible to statistically correlate to rebuild a full set of genes for anything. Accumulating enough DNA from dinosaurs, however, ma
6% of what? (Score:2)
So six percent of the sample was cave bear. How much of the entire cave bear DAN-map was recovered? This sounds much less impressive than at first blush. Can anyone with access to the whole study and the abilty to comprehend it tell us how usef
Re:6% of what? (Score:3, Informative)
Of course, compared to the 2.3 billion base pairs in a human, they have a rather long way to go befo
6% of the samples they took (Score:2)
Anything is possible (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Anything is possible (Score:2)
Re:Anything is possible (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Anything is possible (Score:2)
That would be the screaming and the running? Right?
Re:Anything is possible (Score:3, Informative)
I never heard any follow-up though.
Re:Anything is possible (Score:2)
Even if miraculously tissue survived so long, it wouldn't have usable DNA - slow random chemical reacti
Re:Anything is possible (Score:2)
http://www.snopes.com/humor/letters/smithson.ht
Old books... (Score:1)
These people need to stop reading old books and get back to science.
Unless they're willing to put both groups in a room and lock the door.
Re:Old books... (Score:2)
Nope, can't think of any, either...
Shocking Discovery (Score:1)
. . . and found it to be Winnie the Pooh's ancient ancestor.
Satan Pooh (Score:2)
Role of mitochondria and cytoplasm (Score:5, Interesting)
It's amazing that they can reconstruct the DNA of long-dead creatures but its also clear that nuclear DNA is not the only information-carrying object in biological organisms.
Re:Role of mitochondria and cytoplasm (Score:1)
RTFA:
"It has been very difficult thus far to get anything other than mitochondrial DNA from ancient material," he said.
Recovering the mitochondrial DNA is not as big an issue.
Role of mitochlorians? (Score:2)
This is cool stuff, no doubt. I doubt that we'll be seeing cloned cave bears or clones of Daryl Hannah running amok. The DNA will still be useful for non-cloning applications.
Re:Role of mitochondria and cytoplasm (Score:2, Interesting)
As always in science, the universe mocks our simplifications. We have a gene map, and we discover, IIRC,
Re:Role of mitochondria and cytoplasm (Score:2)
Absolutely. This is what makes science so fascinating.
In fact the cloning end is simply the hook to get people interested in these popular aritcles. It seems to me the real interesting thing is that we can clean up a sample enough to say with some certainty that the sequence is of the specified animal. Then it gets interesting.
What bothers me is the tendency for scientists to promise vaporware. Instead of explaining the real and very i
Extracted and decoded (Score:2)
Unga bunga! (Score:2)
I wonder if they could do the reverse? (Score:2)
They know what it is going into the decoding... but I'm just so fascinated by the technology that I wonder if they can extrapolate the species from just the DNA too.
These guys are f'ing cool. This really is the frontier here on earth for me.
Re:I wonder if they could do the reverse? (Score:2)
unless they're all thumbs... (Score:4, Funny)
Why would Neanderthals want to build a cave bear?
Re:unless they're all thumbs... (Score:2)
Because they thought they were building a cave, bare. Stupid Neanderthals.
OMFGLOL (Score:1)
a subject would look good here (Score:1)
Further digging revealed... (Score:2)
"On.y y.. ca.. p.even. f.rest fir.s"
Antropologists are currently looking for assistance in decoding the parchement.
I wonder... (Score:1)
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/sci/tech/4602739.stm [bbc.co.uk]
This makes me wonder if we could even "build" a modern Human from a genetic blueprint. Is it possible to physically predict something's appearance from its DNA?
Re:I wonder... (Score:1)
Re:I wonder... (Score:2)
Not possible (Score:1, Funny)
The Earth is around 5000 years old.These guys are the devil's pawns and work only to Deceive you!
Cave bears are tricks of the Devil to "test your faith"!
Won't make dinosaurs (Score:1)
Read The Science of Jurassic Park: And the Lost World Or, How to Build a Dinosaur by Rob Desalle, David Lindley. Excellent breakdown of the tasks involved. Two bucks on Amazon.
that's no so great (Score:2, Funny)
Encino Man [imdb.com]
Summary:
Stoney and Dave find a caveman (Link) trapped in ice, thaw him out, and show him around town. Although Link is slow to catch on to basic concepts of 20th century life, he has no trouble impressing all the girls and helping Stoney and Dave find the coolness they've been searching for.
didn't they find t. rex soft tissue recently? (Score:4, Interesting)
now if you tell me that dna will degrade over 70 million years and be unrecoverable, then i will believe you
but if you also tell me that they can recover soft tissue with capillaries and cells visible from 70 million years ago, i wouldn't believe you
but that's what they did
so now i don't know what to believe... isn't some sort of t. rex dna recovery possible after all then? granted, it would be fragmented, but if we are talking dessicated soft tissue, can't the fragments be recovered in some sort of context that might make reconstruction possible?
Re:didn't they find t. rex soft tissue recently? (Score:5, Informative)
Excellent point (Score:2)
Let's say that there are a million unstable points along the DNA chain that are horribly unstable, and that you'll lose one such molecule on average once a day, in a given cell. Can you recover enough to rebuild an animal, after 200 million years?
Re:didn't they find t. rex soft tissue recently? (Score:2)
but if you also tell me that they can recover soft tissue with capillaries and cells visible from 70 million years ago, i wouldn't believe you
but that's what they did
Did they really?
so now i don't know what to believe
It starts to make sense if you allow yourself to question the extreme age that this tissue is claimed to have.
And yet, DNA is being found in dino fossils (Score:2)
They have to say this (Score:1)
If it isn't at least thinkable, why are they denying it is possible? Because they know it is a conclusion people will jump to. The creation process may be difficult and error-prone, but it isn't outside the realm of possibility, as Dolly the shppe would tell you i
Re:They have to say this (Score:1)
That's why you need an island that no one ever goes to [blogspot.com]. That rules out the tropical islands, like in the Jurassic Park movies.I'm talking someplace desolate that almost no one has ever heard of, and wouldn't want to go to even if they did.
President Bush to Liberate Alaska [blogspot.com]
Re: (Score:1, Flamebait)
Re:Do NOT clone that cave man!!! (Score:1)
Set back how? Are you absolutely certain that our DNA is any better than theirs? And aside from that, it's not even certain that humans could ever really mate with neanderthals or other hominids. Earlier homo sapiens is a possib
No "Clan of the Cave Bear" references yet? (Score:2)
Will this finally put Creationist claims to rest? (Score:2)
Important question: (Score:1)
did anyone else read 'care bear'? (Score:1)
I'd rather... (Score:2)
Clan of the Cave Bear (Score:1)
No one has stayed year-round on the island since 1954 [blogspot.com]
too bad bears don't lay eggs (Score:2)
So when does :"Ursine Park" open? (Score:2)
scientists have extracted and decoded the DNA of a cave bear that died 40,000 years ago.
or does Crichton have to write the book first?
Mitochondria (Score:1, Offtopic)
Short-sightedness? (Score:1)
"In hundreds or thousands of years from now, we may have advanced our technology so we can create creatures from DNA sequence information," Dr Eddy Rubin, director of the US Department of Energy Joint Genome Institute in Walnut Creek, California, told the BBC News website.
This is remarkably short-sighted for someone in his position. I'd say a few decades at most, given our current rate of advancement in understanding genetics. IIRC the human genome was sequenced in less than half the time originally
Bear left (Score:2)
--Rob