Taiwan Breeds Transgenic, Fluorescent Green Pigs 261
ScentCone writes "Transgenic pigs (and other critters) are valuable research tools because of their utility in studying human diseases. Tracking changes in some developing tissues is going to be easier, say a Taiwanese team that has introduced fluorescent, green proteins into the breeding. Said one of the researchers: 'There are partially fluorescent green pigs elsewhere, but ours are the only ones in the world that are green from inside out. Even their hearts and internal organs are green.' Do you like green eggs and ham?"
How Would You Like To Swing On A Star? (Score:4, Funny)
How would you like to swing on a star,
Carry moonbeans home in a jar,
You could be better off than you are,
You could be a fluorescent green pig!
Now the new pig is an animal with a bright green hide
His wings are powerful and wide!
He flies majestically through the skies
'Cause know genetic engineering risks are a pack of lies!
So if PETA and Greenpeace are your gigs,
You may be bombed a flying green pigs!
Re:How Would You Like To Swing On A Star? (Score:5, Funny)
Homer: (trolling Slashdot) Apple story..... another Apple story! One more and I'm a millionaire! Come on, Apple story, please, please, please, please, please. D'oh! That fluorescent green pig thing! Where were you yesterday?
Green pigs eh? (Score:5, Funny)
And while you are creating freaks o' nature, please sign my future offspring up for a pair of wings, skin with chlorophyll, and night vision.
News flash! (Score:4, Funny)
Buddy, I have some sad news for you:
You post on slashdot.
Re:Green pigs eh? (Score:3, Interesting)
Would chlorophyl-laden skin be useful for the average person? First off, I assume you mean chloroplast-laden skin, as chlorophyl doesn't usuall
Re:Green pigs eh? (Score:3, Interesting)
Night vision would likely be a trade-off: increase night vision and you'll probably harm color. (Though there are a few things you could do that would increase both first. Reflective retina backs and larger pupil ranges come to mind.)
You pr
Re:Green pigs eh? (Score:3, Interesting)
Really no need to speed up the metabolism (mmm, fever). All you need to do is short out the fat storage mechanism, so that excess blood sugars are dumped into the urine instead of stored away. A million years of evolution through feast and famine cycles favored humans with efficient metabolisms that maximized the amount of energy they could store as fat put us where we are, the last 50 have favore
strengh (Score:2)
Remember the stories of a mother lifting a car because her offspring was under it ?
Remember that barrier you jumped after being frightened by a snake ?
It all happened because your body pumped large doses of adrenaline in your body...
Which is also one of the things oriental martial arts study tech you to bypass...
Hard studies in Kung Fu (and Yin techniques) allow you to do just that...put more adr
Re:Green pigs eh? (Score:3, Interesting)
The backbone makes a lot of sense in four-legged animals, but not so much in upright ones. Same with the intesti
Re:Green pigs eh? (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Green pigs eh? (Score:2)
You don't need genetic engineering for that... (Score:2)
I have a feeling this is widespread already. (Score:2)
Re:Green pigs eh? (Score:3, Funny)
Just show him a photo of a police helicopter in flight. Then book your vacation.
Me, I'm holding out for a true phosphorescent pet. But not one of those glow-squids because they don't live very long.
Re:Green pigs eh? (Score:2)
Stupid Pigs (Score:3, Funny)
uh-oh (Score:2, Funny)
Re:uh-oh (Score:2, Funny)
I grew up on a farm and ... (Score:5, Funny)
Furthermore, after reading the two links, I'm not exactly clear on what the benefit is when you turn them green. I assume it's so you can tell who's mated with the new pigs because the transgenic coloration will be present in the offspring?
From the article: Four out of 265 is a pretty low rate.
I wonder how this will affect their ability to survive in nature and I also wonder if the Polynesian Islands will one day be covered with rainbow colored pigs left there by researchers trying to do stem cell research.
Researcher 1: "Has he got any orange on him?"
Researcher 2: "Nope but he's got red, green and purple all about him."
Researcher 1: "Then he's not one a carrier."
Researcher 2: "That's one ugly pig though." *looks in his Audubon Society guide* "According to his colors, he's got Alzheimer's genes, cancer genes and is extremely susceptible to syphilis...poor bastard."
Pigs like that will be easier prey (Score:2, Informative)
I hope that fluorescence doesn't last long.
This has got to be the worst news I've read all day. This makes me think of that Jurassic Park quote... we keep asking ourselves whether we can do something, but not whether we should.
Re:Pigs like that will be easier prey (Score:3, Informative)
It lasts as long as they live. The green isn't just a dye or ink, it's the actual color of their skin! Their skin _is_ green, it's not dyed green.
-Jesse
Re:Pigs like that will be easier prey (Score:2)
Re:Pigs like that will be easier prey (Score:3, Informative)
As I understand it, they're fluorescent, not chemoluminescent. In other words, they require an external stimulus (e.g. a UV light) to generate the glowing effect. In a completely dark room, they glow no more than your average, garden-variety pig does.
This reads like a cyberpunk novel (Score:2)
That would make the whole black/yellow/white thing seem prety tame.
Imagine if there were people walking around shaded with a 'Tiggy Winky' purple hue.
The religious right would go red in the face.
Oor maybe you could color voters persistantly according to their registered political party affiliation. Red state, blue state would really mean something then.
I can see riding a bus and being confronted with some kids colored 'gang gree
Re:This reads like a cyberpunk novel (Score:2)
Just ask someone who suffers from Argyria
Re:Pigs like that will be easier prey (Score:2)
I thought they were only green when really angry. I don't like them then they're angry...
Re:Pigs like that will be easier prey (Score:3, Interesting)
Since Hernando de Soto brought pigs to the New World, wild boars were used up through the colonies to destroy Native American crops. Unfortunately, there wasn't much to kill these pigs. Feral pigs are quite muscular and large
Ever had to castrate a full grown boar? I have, and it's not easy, four grown men to hold it down and one to
Re:Pigs like that will be easier prey (Score:2, Interesting)
Tranqs cost too much (Score:2)
You think my family would waste money on tranqs to cull a pig? Not bloody likely.
If you think family farms have the money to throw around on things like this, you're wrong. There's no coincidence I'm working for a huge company and not on a family farm--corporate farms have sapped the money from the small time farmer. Kiss the family farm goodbye & enjoy your cheap frankenfood.
Re:Pigs like that will be easier prey (Score:3, Funny)
At least, that's their plan.
Re:Pigs like that will be easier prey (Score:2)
The same place other pigs hide... In the pen, waiting for the farmer to decide they're fat enough to slaughter. Or did you not realize where bacon comes from, and that pigs are not wild creatures? Not to mention the fact that these are specifically pigs that live in a lab. Either way, no need for them to hide.
Well, there's this thing about genes, see? The pigs will be flourescent green for at least as long as my hair will be
Re:Pigs like that will be easier prey (Score:2)
Re:Pigs like that will be easier prey (Score:2)
Re:I grew up on a farm and ... (Score:2)
Re:I grew up on a farm and ... (Score:3, Informative)
Re:I grew up on a farm and ... (Score:2)
True, but I'm afraid you've also missed this one:
Once they begin to breed the pigs, it will be all but impossible to stop the spread of the genes. I fully expect to see some jellyfish genes in animals mean for consmption
Re:I grew up on a farm and ... (Score:2)
I saw jellyfish on the menu at a local chinese restaurant... never dared to taste it, though.
Re:I grew up on a farm and ... (Score:2)
that's a common fear with genetically modified crops, but I don't think it's nearly as valid a fear as it is for, say, soybeans or rats.
Soybean pollen travels through the air, contaminating neighbouring crops that could be miles away. Pig sperm, not so much.
If lab rats with this gene escaped, they could
Re:I grew up on a farm and ... (Score:2)
on an organ farm? (Score:2)
Actually, that's pretty good. Generally speaking, a "1 healthy animal per 1000 modified embryos" success rate was normal, and that resulted in chimeric fusions, the splotchy nature of the incorporation of the exogenous DNA. Some parts of the animal would express the genes for the green fluorescent protein, others wouldn't. If they really got a line of pigs that express the gene in 100% of their cells, then that's a big step forward, not so much to have pigs that flueores
Now I can have green eggs (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Now I can have green eggs (Score:2)
Go on. Look it up.
Re:Now I can have green eggs (Score:2)
Go on. Look it up.
It is confirmed. I have the book right here. Sam I Am has a plate with green eggs, and a green ham next to it. It's a bit of linguistic ambiguity there in the title phrase. Is it (Green Eggs) and Ham, or Green (Eggs and Ham)? Common usage would have just the eggs green, but the artwork shows the ham green as well. As a small child my mom offered to make me green eggs and ham, and I distinctly remember requesting JUST THE EGGS be colored, as green ham is j
Re:Now I can have green eggs (Score:2)
I found some green ham in the back of my refridgerator and had the same thought!
Next stop... (Score:2)
So are green chickens next?
Re:Next stop... (Score:3, Funny)
Green Ham... (Score:2)
Green Ham and Eggs? (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Pigs are filthy animals. (Score:2)
Re:Pigs are filthy animals. - Oblig Simpsons (Score:5, Funny)
saying you're *never* going to eat any animal again? What about
bacon?
Lisa: No.
Homer: Ham?
Lisa: No.
Homer: Pork chops?
Lisa: Dad! Those all come from the same animal!
Homer: Yeah, right Lisa. A wonderful, magical animal.
Translucent Pigs? (Score:2)
Image word: 'develops'
Re:Translucent Pigs? (Score:3, Funny)
Actually, this could give rise to a new kind of "free range" livestock, where you could just let them wander wherever you want and then when you need to round them up you use a UV spotlight and you can see them almost anywhere. Of course, they would be Genetically Engineered Free Range, which might be the juxtaposition that kills the deal.
Greens pigs are nothing more than red herrings (Score:5, Funny)
obligatory Chris Rock quote (Score:2, Funny)
Pork... (Score:5, Funny)
Sometimes it just writes itself. (Score:4, Funny)
This is not the Kermit and Miss Piggy sex tape you were looking for.
I saw a pig upon a stair,
A verdant pig that wasn't there,
It wasn't there again today,
Gee, I wish he'd go away.
I never saw a glowing pig,
I never hope to be one,
But I'll tell you this right now,
I'd rather see than be one.
Why this is great science. (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Why this is great science. (Score:2)
Re:Why this is great science. (Score:2)
Re:Ghost in the Shell: SAC had an episode of this (Score:2)
Basically, the premise was that there were med students that were stealing organs that people where going to throw away in order to sell on the black market by relabling them.
Still its an interesting concept and maybe possible someday.
universal protein induction (Score:3, Insightful)
As to harvesting transgenic organs for transplant into humans, it is not enough to add necessary antigens, you have to remove unwanted antigens as well.
this is a little more tricky.
You also have to demonstrate that the tissue does not contain any porcine viruses that can jump to humans; proving a negative is often a little tedious
Alistair Reynolds novels.. (Score:3, Interesting)
Who knows, maybe his description was just a few hundred years early
That's Alastair Reynolds (Score:2)
-- Alastair (not Reynolds)
Journal Article? (Score:2)
Re:Journal Article? (Score:2)
Vulcan pigs? (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Vulcan pigs? (Score:2)
Re:Vulcan pigs? (Score:2)
No no no. You're confusing the terms necessary and sufficient. In order to prove something is a Vulcan, it is necessary that it have green blood. However, having green blood is not sufficient to prove it is Vulcan.
Otherwise, you've already proven that it is a table since it has four legs.
Sounds like just the perfect (Score:5, Funny)
"Yeah, that'll happen when... (Score:2)
Another use (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Another use (Score:2)
Amazing. 113 comments, 19 ranked +3 or above, and this is the only freaking one with a science-to-humor ratio of greater than 1.
No wonder I'm a subscri [slashdot.org]
Re:Another use (Score:3, Insightful)
Marvelous (Score:2)
Close Encounters (Score:2)
I bet their colleagues are green with envy.
Valuable indeed... (Score:3, Funny)
"Transgenic pigs (and other critters) are valuable research tools because of their utility in studying human diseases."
Not sure what the big deal is (Score:3, Funny)
What's really neat is at night you don't need to turn the lights on around the house to see. Your natural bodily glow provides enough light for you to see. Even better, if you get up in the middle of the night you never have to worry about stepping on your cat or dog because you can easily see them.
However, it should be noted that image of glowing bodies under the covers can be quite disturbing for the uninitiated so the orgies have to be kept to a minimum.
Yes, I survived Three Mile Island. Gallows humor is what keeps me going.
Get it right Taiwan! (Score:2)
Margaret Atwood called, she wants her plot back. (Score:2)
Why am I thinking of pigoons [oryxandcrake.com] ?
Did anyone else notice... (Score:5, Funny)
I for one look forward to it. (Score:3, Funny)
*mwhahah*
Soylent Green is Pigs! (Score:3, Funny)
Pigoons? (Score:2)
Marketing opportunity (Score:2)
Green = dangerous + eew! (Score:2)
If the ham is green, how are we supposed to spot this stuff?
In other news today... (Score:2)
Truly, Truly Wonderful! (Score:2)
Pics (Score:4, Interesting)
They appear to glow in the dark!
You can do this at home (Score:2, Funny)
Mating (Score:2)
It would be interesting to know if the green color increases their ability to attract mates.
Wow... (Score:5, Insightful)
These transgenic animals are nothing new -- transgenics (even the fluorescent kind) have been around for many years, and are a critical tool for elucidating basic mechanisms in biology. Pigs, like mice, worms, yeast, bacteria, etc., are model organisms -- their underlying cell biology is so generic, that understanding it is immensely useful for many pure research and biomedical purposes.
The researchers involved in this study were not out to make some freak of nature -- they used a very straightforward line of reasoning to make these transgenics. By labelling the entire animal, one can trace any part of the animal when it is transplanted into an unlabelled animal. For example, researchers could study what happens with organ transplant: how do the donor organs interact with the receipient body? Does it integrate well or not? More cutting-edge research could involve tracing individual tissues and cells, such as stem cells and neurons and cardiac cells. Where do the cells migrate? Do they localize properly (i.e. do cardiac cells stay where they should at the heart)? Do stem cells that were introduced for a particular damage (i.e. brain damage) actually migrate to the brain and function where they should?
As stated in the article, many others have done similar studies with mice, monkeys, etc while labelling specific tissues. These researchers have done it with a pig, and while labelling every cell in the pig. I don't personally believe this is novel from a research standpoint, but I think it is a valuable tool continue research in mammalian biology. I certainly don't think it's something to be feared, hated, and maligned as some here have suggested.
Insert obligatory Dr. Mephisto joke here (Score:2)
Silent, hidden PRM (Piggy Rights Management) (Score:3, Interesting)
Easy! Create an artificial gene that makes a do-nothing protein with a novel, specific, unique sequence that you select. Insert that gene along with the action gene cluster (EatLawyer + ShtNickles) and the marker gene (Green Fluorescent Protein). Then, everytime the pig's cells express the action genes, they also express the marker (GFP) and your non-obvious marker protein.
When their SuperPigs(tm) hit the marketplace two years after your WonderPigs(tm), you just take a tissue sample and look for the telltale protein. Even if they silcenced the GFP and replaced it with Red, Yellow or Magenta, they wouldn't know to look for your hidden gene. You could even set it up so that it's only expressed under certain conditions, like an Easter Egg. That particular proetin sequence isn't found in nature, so if it's there, this must be a pirated pig.
It's like the funny pictures that chip manufacturers hide on processing chips [fsu.edu]... copy this layout and we'll know where to look for our signature.
Where Can I Buy One? (Score:2)
I'd love to have a glowing pig so I can tell the neighbors it's radioactive.
Re:But... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:But... (Score:2)
Re:Fluorescent green spam! (Score:5, Funny)
It is from the legendary Pink Spam Mines of Kansas is where the greatest yields used to be from. That was until the mega-corporate spam concerns bought out all the independent mines or just put them out of business.
My father was one of the last of the hearty breed of Spammers (not the same spammers we talk about today). I remember as a kid he'd come home after work, covered in pink chunks and dripping with gelatinous goo - he used to set down his hardhat on our porch, where every day it was ilicked clean by my puppy Max.
For some reason, Max died an early death.
Nope!! (Score:2, Informative)
Re:expansion of pet market (Score:2)
-Rick
Re:And this is supposed to make me feel better (Score:3, Insightful)
At what percent of remaing human genes does a creature retain its civil rights?
I certainly don't claim to be an expert in genetics, but I don't think there is such a thing as a "human gene". It's like saying something is made of "car factory bricks". The researchers aren't at fault here, it's your understanding of animal genetics.