Scientists Have Re-Cloned Mice To the 25th Generation 134
derekmead writes "Dolly's mere existence was profound. It was also unusually short, at just six years. But scientists in Japan announced yesterday they have succeeded in cloning mice using the same technique that created Dolly with more or less perfect results: The mice are healthy, they live just as long as regular mice, and they've been flawlessly cloned and recloned from the same source to the 25th generation. Researchers claim it's the first example of seamless, repeat cloning using the Dolly method—known as "somatic cell nuclear transfer" (SCNT)—in which the nucleus from an adult source animal is transferred to an egg with its nucleus removed. Until recently, the process was fraught with failures and mutations. But the team led by Teruhiko Wakayama, whose results were published today in the journal Cell Stem Cell, was able to create 581 clones from the same original mouse. Scientists, including Dolly's creator, have long felt the process was still too unstable—and too wasteful of precious eggs, given the failure rate—to be used on humans any time soon. But perhaps it's not so far off, after all."
Hard to believe (Score:5, Funny)
The only thing greater than me, would be to have 12 clones of me. Hopefully they also have a compact clone model, so I can call him "mini-me."
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You're so wrong. There are certain women that should be cloned for people like me with no personality that have no ability to get girls on our own.
Re:Hard to believe (Score:5, Funny)
Most slashdotters have been waiting 20+ years for a hot girl to be interested in us, what's another 20?
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Most slashdotters have been waiting 20+ years for a hot girl to be interested in us, what's another 20?
For me, it's 40 plus long years of digital pr0n and gummy input devices.
But you kids should see my ASCII collection. From six feet back and with squinted eyes, I mean.
CAPTCHA = "miseries", I kid you not.
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What makes you think a clone would ever go out with you?
Re:Hard to believe (Score:5, Funny)
A statement emblematic of so many issues, but I'll choose to respond with snark:
What makes you think a clone would ever go out with you?
Hasn't bad sci-fi taught you anything? Despite being genetically identical to humans, because they are, clones mysteriously exhibit a creepy lack of free will and/or near-identical personality to the original(despite a developmental history that includes no life experience other than 'grow to apparent age of ~20 years with alarming speed in tube full of medical fluid'), perfect for producing armies of robo-hitlers or servile sex kitten harems!
It's probably because they only get allocated one soul per genome or something, couldn't make any less sense than the answers usually provided....
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I assumed that usually had to do with clones not being treated like people and being raised in some very sheltered environment where they are brainwashed or whatever.
Of course, there's also the idea that increasing the proportion of [heterosexual] women in the population improves the odds for [heterosexual] men.
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Best 'pitfalls of cloning yourself' movie EVA! :)
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It's probably because they only get allocated one soul per genome or something, couldn't make any less sense than the answers usually provided....
Hmm... that neatly explains the "evil twin" trope...
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Re:Hard to believe (Score:5, Funny)
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Those are called androids. Not clones.
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Yeah, now you would only need to replicate all of the growing up with the same parents + experiences and still you would end up with strange people just looking like you. Could make a nice bunch anyway.
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http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=J5lvFCSbnbs [youtube.com]
Copyright (Score:5, Interesting)
I know this is sorta trollish, I just thought it was interesting too
There's no copyright for DNA. Someone could take a skin-swab from you, and clone you, without your permission. If they did, would you feel your rights had been violated?
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But if I copy a MasseKid, you still have a MasseKid. So according that sacred slashdot principle you shouldn't have any say over the matter.
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So if the RIAA used trademark law instead of copyright Slashdot would be on their side? Somehow I doubt that.
According to slashdot patents seem to be evil. Copyright is is evil when the RIAA use it but fine when the GPL does. Trademarks are OK if you are the Linux Foundation but evil if you are someone else.
I.e. it's not the type of IP, more who is using it.
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No, why would I?
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Well, I'm sorta in your camp, but many people consider their genes part of their identity. "Genes+experience=person" kind of equation.
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So, without experience, it isn't "you"... QED... no problem.
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I know this is sorta trollish, I just thought it was interesting too
There's no copyright for DNA. Someone could take a skin-swab from you, and clone you, without your permission. If they did, would you feel your rights had been violated?
No copyright (yet) but there is patent.
Someone could skin-swab you, clone you, patent the process with your DNA. I don't think they could sue you, but they could charge you for any unauthorized reproduction (children).
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No copyright (yet) but there is patent.
Someone could skin-swab you, clone you, patent the process with your DNA. I don't think they could sue you, but they could charge you for any unauthorized reproduction (children).
BTW, while I'm sure that scenario is unrealistic and display ignorance of patents and biology, given what we've seen from gene patents and folks like Monsanto, I'm sure we're not far off from the day when someone receives gene therapy and gets sued when patented genes are passed down to off-spring.
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wouldn't your conception be prior art?
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A clone is a different living orgamism. It is not you any more than an identical twin.
Keep your panties on, your rights are irrelevent to the existence of a clone.
People are more than genetic material alone. Your life experiences define you, your genetics only influence the rest.
All that's happened is you suddenly have a potential organ donor
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Sounds like Parts: The Clonus Horror. [wikipedia.org]
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And "The Island" sounds a lot like Clonus, but that's a different story altogether.
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I know this is sorta trollish, I just thought it was interesting too There's no copyright for DNA. Someone could take a skin-swab from you, and clone you, without your permission. If they did, would you feel your rights had been violated?
As tens of thousands of geeks had the same thought at that very moment, "how do I get some Natalie Portman DNA?"
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I think using DNA as evidence in court would become problematic. What if the clone was a psycho? Conversely, what if the clone were a sane upstanding person and the DNA donor were a serial killer?
What if your identical twin is a psyco serial killer and you're an upstanding citizen? It just means that the DNA comes from one of the two of you.
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There is a copyright on DNA. Many of the HIV drugs out now are based on the gene sequencing of several African prostitutes that had natural immunity to the disease. Their DNA was sequenced and then copyrighted by the drug companies in question with no reimbursement to the prostitutes what-so-ever.
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Immunity, unless they stop being prostitutes, then they would get it.
http://www.nytimes.com/2000/02/03/us/a-new-aids-mystery-prostitutes-who-have-remained-immune.html [nytimes.com]
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1539443/ [nih.gov]
I couldn't find any link indicating anyone has trued to get copyright protection on their genes.
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No.
Clones aren't you. They wouldn't belong to you, and they won't have the life experiences of you.
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How I feel is one thing, but (Score:2)
...how my parents feel is another.
Genetically my clone is their son. Do *they* have any rights or obligations towards him?
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What if the clone gets someone pregnant, and a DNA test 'proves' you are the father, and therefore on the hook for child support?
What about child support for your own clones? you couldn't just abandon them...
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I always wondered if you were to have sex with a clone of your self, is that gay or just masturbation?
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Good for the mice. (Score:1)
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Now to get it working in humans.
Why? I don't know anyone who is so perfect they're worth making a clone of.
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> Why? I don't know anyone who is so perfect they're worth making a clone of.
Imagine 1000 clones, living in different environments. Monitored by scientists. What we could learn from that.
Or if we just want to have a duplicate of someone... How about Gauss? Tesla? Darwin? Newton? Or someone who is still alive and a bit like them.
Or how about me? I'm not perfect, but I know now what I'm good at. And I know what I wish I had learned earlier in my life to be even better. What if I could teach my clone to be
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Or how about me? I'm not perfect, but I know now what I'm good at.
I'll say. The last thing we need are clones of Anonymous Coward.
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I know things I would do differently in my life. I'm not entirely confident in my ability to force some other person to do them, even if it was a clone of me. For reference: http://calvinandhobbes.wikia.com/wiki/Duplicator [wikia.com]
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Well, one thing would be to clone someone without a brain, for parts.
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I thought I was the only one.
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Clones are just as good as an identical twin. Only possible separated by age.
It is not like Sci-Fi where you have a body ready to load your consciousness in so you can live forever. It would be a Unique Human Being with just happens to have the same genetic code, but would be a different person.
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Nah, just remove the forebrain while it's still an embryo, saves you a *fortune* in ongoing anesthetic costs, not to mention nutrient slurry. It's not like anybody is going to want their *brain* replaced, so really it's just a bunch of useless calorie-burning meat. Heck, catch it soon enough and there's not really even much of a brain to speak of yet - scoop out a few thousand cells at the critical junction and you've got a product that was never meaningfully "human" - after all the rest of our body is no
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Widespread cloning would be really, really bad for the gene pool.
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No kidding. Just ask the Asgard.
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We have clones, why do we need a gene pool?
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For the same reasons organisms do: on a biological level, genetic variation is a big part of how we can adapt to changing circumstances.
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Because when bacteria and viruses keep getting better at killing us we need the random genetic mutations to help us survive. Look at banana colonies that have collapsed due to cloning of banana trees when a new disease came by and wiped out all the trees.
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So, just like diamonds, that's artificial scarcity at full work here.
According to Wikipedia, a woman has something around 300.000 egg cells when she turns fertile. Let us assume 50.000 cells as the average for all women between 16 and 40. So how many human females do we have in that age range?
According to the US census [1], there were ~4.5 billion (short scale) humans on this planet between 16 and 64. To subtract the oldest 24 years, let us be pessimistic and assume an equal distribution; so we need to subt
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Thanks for the interesting post, but I believe the average you indicated underestimates your final results by about a factor of three:
[A] single human egg cells weighs between 0.00177-0.0042 mg. Average of 0.001mg.
cloning/copying same differance (Score:1)
Hooray - more ways to make more humans. (Score:2)
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Just what the planet needs.
Given how expensive the process is likely to be, I'm not terribly concerned.
Now, given how expensive the process is likely to be, I'm also not wildly interested, outside of some very niche applications and the value as pure science...
Meh. (Score:2, Insightful)
Call me evil, but I'm less interested in full blown cloning than I am creating a sack of meat and replacement organs.
Lose a kidney? I fear no rejection for I am fear incarnate! Also because cloned organs.
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And that's why you posted AC, right?
Summary seems to imply Dolly's cloning was flawed (Score:5, Informative)
But from the Wikipedia entry the summary itself links to:
A post-mortem examination showed she had a form of lung cancer called Jaagsiekte,[15] which is a fairly common disease of sheep and is caused by the retrovirus JSRV.[16] Roslin scientists stated that they did not think there was a connection with Dolly being a clone, and that other sheep in the same flock had died of the same disease.[14] Such lung diseases are a particular danger for sheep kept indoors, and Dolly had to sleep inside for security reasons.
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Dolly had to sleep inside for security reasons.
Why? Were they afraid she was going to steal things from the other sheep? Was there a history of anti-social behavior in her family history (as shown here [youtube.com])?
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Apparently Dolly just didn't like staying outdoors. It's called argylaphobia.
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that's where Mary went; Dolly was sure to go
Good for Disney (Score:2)
"Failure Rate" is the issue (Score:4, Insightful)
Telomeres (Score:4)
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Telomeres can be regenerated with a telemorase enzyme, something our bodies can produce, but normally don't. I'd imagine that either the embryonic state naturally activates the regeneration (seems plausible, there's some serious cell division going on after all), or that at some point it's stimulated artificially.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Telomere#Lengthening
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What? What are you asking?
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Apparently, Dolly was not a good example... (Score:2)
...of how telomeres work during cloning.
http://www.sciencemag.org/content/288/5466/586.summary [sciencemag.org]
Science 28 April 2000:
Vol. 288 no. 5466 pp. 586-587
DOI: 10.1126/science.288.5466.586
News of the Week
CELL BIOLOGY
In Contrast to Dolly, Cloning Resets Telomere Clock in Cattle
Gretchen Vogel
When researchers took a close look at the cells of Dolly, the cloned sheep, they found that her telomeres, the caps on the ends of the chromosomes, were shorter than normal. Because telomere length decreases with age, this was an indication that Dolly might age unusually quickly. But on page 665, a physician and his colleagues report that cells from calves that they cloned have telomeres that are longer than normal. According to the researchers, the findings suggest that tissues produced by cloning might last at least as long as the original cells--and perhaps longer.
Rabbit eggs (Score:1)
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you have a misconception, women do not "produce one egg a month". A women is born with all the eggs she'll ever have in her ovaries. Normally one of them is released a month after puberty, but there are ways of stimulating the release of more or of getting more
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you have a misconception, women do not "produce one egg a month". A women is born with all the eggs she'll ever have in her ovaries. Normally one of them is released a month after puberty, but there are ways of stimulating the release of more or of getting more
Sheeps and rabbits "convert more eggs to maturity" in each cycle than humans. Better now? When I had the idea of xenocloning I had just read an article saying that egg availability was one of the main barriers to human cloning. She-rabbits are also "born with all the eggs she'll ever have in her ovaries". I think that's true of all female mammals. Maybe the eggs must be mature (complete meiosis I and II and segregation of polar bodies) to be used in cloning. I don't know. Do you know?
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Duncan was right? (Score:2)
Moon mining and huge advances in cloning announced on the same day.... Maybe Duncan Jones was onto something? [imdb.com]
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Well, his father IS a time-jumping psychic alien...
"Pinkys, are you pondering what I'm pondering?" (Score:1)
"I think so, Brain. But how do you ever fit the cheeses of the world inside the handles of this mechanic's screwdriver's set?" "NARF! (x581)"
HOW DO EGG YOLKS BECOME CHICKENS? (Score:1)
The time is now here (Score:1)
A Meaningless Trivial Accomplishment (Score:1)
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what a silly misconception you have. a clone is merely a sibling, like a twin. a clone has no memories whatsoever of the donor