Healthy clones: Dolly the sheep's heirs
reach ripe old age
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[July 27, 2016]
By Ben Hirschler
LONDON (Reuters) - The heirs of Dolly the
sheep are enjoying a healthy old age, proving cloned animals can live
normal lives and offering reassurance to scientists hoping to use cloned
cells in medicine.
Dolly, cloning's poster child, was born in Scotland in 1996. She died
prematurely in 2003, aged six, after developing osteoarthritis and a
lung infection, raising concerns that cloned animals may age more
quickly than normal offspring.
Now researchers have allayed those fears by reporting that 13 cloned
sheep, including four genomic copies of Dolly, are still in good shape
at between seven and nine years of age, or the equivalent of 60 to 70 in
human years.
"Overall, the results are suggesting that these animals are remarkably
healthy," said Kevin Sinclair of the University of Nottingham, whose
team reported their findings in the journal Nature Communications on
Tuesday.
It is the first time experts have made such a detailed age-related
health assessment of cloned animals, looking at factors such as blood
pressure, diabetes risk and joint damage.
While no animals were lame, there were signs of mild osteoarthritis in
some sheep and one had moderate disease, which scientists said was to be
expected at their age.
Dolly was the first mammal to be cloned from an adult cell, using a
process called somatic cell nuclear transfer (SCNT).
This involved taking a sheep egg, removing its DNA and replacing it with
DNA from a frozen udder cell of a sheep that died years before. The egg
was then zapped with electricity to make it grow like a fertilized
embryo. No sperm were involved.
Dolly's creation triggered fears of human reproductive cloning, or
producing genetic copies of living or dead people, but mainstream
scientists have ruled this out as far too dangerous.
Instead, the hope is to develop "therapeutic cloning", in which cloned
cells could be used to regenerate faulty tissue.
Dolly's healthy heirs offer encouragement for regenerative medicine,
although the SCNT process remains tricky and many would-be clones still
fail to develop properly, despite technical advances since Dolly's
birth.
"This shows cells can undergo complete reprogramming and it's reassuring
to know that cells can be perfectly normal," Sinclair said. "The
challenge going forward is to increase the proportion of cells that
undergo this complete reprogramming or better select for that."
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The world's first clone of an adult animal, Dolly the sheep, bleats
during a photocall at the Roslin Institute in Edinburgh, Scotland
January 4, 2002. REUTERS/Jeff J Mitchell/Files
PARKINSON'S DISEASE
The four sheep cloned using the same genetic material as for Dolly -
called Debbie, Denise, Dianna and Daisy - have just had their ninth
birthdays and, together with nine other clones, are part of a unique
flock based in Nottingham.
Unlike Dolly, who was housed indoors for security reasons, today's
clones live mainly outside, which may be one factor behind their
relative health, since sheep kept in barns can be susceptible to
infections.
Cloning is already used in some U.S. food production, although not
in Europe. But the big hope is to produce human stem cells that
could replace damaged tissue in devastating conditions like
Parkinson's disease or spinal cord injuries.
Work on stem-cell medicine has been hobbled in the past by technical
challenges as well as ethical issues but it received a boost three
years ago when biologists finally created human stem cells using the
same process that produced Dolly.
Until then, the most natural source of human stem cells was human
embryos left over from IVF treatment, whose use in research is
controversial.
Another approach involves adding genes to adult cells to turn back
their biological clocks, creating so-called induced pluripotent stem
cells that behave like embryonic ones. The long-term safety of these
cell has still to be established.
(Editing by Anna Willard)
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