-Caveat Lector-

Source: University Of California - Davis (http://www.ucdavis.edu/)

Date: Posted 8/24/2001

UC Davis' First Cloned Calf Born, Succumbs Three Days Later

The first calf cloned and delivered at the University of California, Davis, died
Saturday, just three days after its birth. Results of the necropsy or animal
autopsy, which should pinpoint the cause of death, are pending.

"We're saddened and disappointed by the death of the calf, " said animal
science professor Gary Anderson, an authority on embryonic development in
mammals and lead researcher on the cloning study. "And yet the birth itself is
a milestone," said Anderson. "We're hopeful that the continued research will
help us improve the cloning technique so that it can be useful in animal
agriculture, ultimately for producing more healthful meat and milk products."

The brown and white Hereford calf was delivered by Caesarean section Aug.
15 at the UC Davis Veterinary Medical Teaching Hospital. It was part of a
research project conducted by Anderson and doctoral candidate Cynthia
Batchelder. Their ongoing research is aimed at determining if the type of cell
used in the cloning procedure affects cloning success.

The UC Davis calf was cloned from a skin cell taken from the ear of a 15-
year-old reddish brown Hereford cow. The calf was carried by a white-faced
black surrogate mother, which is a cross between a Hereford and an Angus,
both beef breeds.

"I'm awed that we could produce a live calf from an adult skin cell, yet
humbled by the knowledge that there were things wrong with her that the best
and most advanced medical care available could not overcome," said
Batchelder. "On one hand, we in the scientific community have learned so
much and on the other hand there is still so much we have yet to understand."


Like many cloned calves and sheep, the UC Davis calf was larger than
typical Hereford calves. Although well-proportioned, it weighed roughly 150
pounds compared with the 75-80 pounds usually seen in calves of this breed.
As expected, the cloned calf had the same coloring and markings as the
Hereford cow from which she was cloned.

A clone is a genetic replica of another living being. Some scientists are
studying cloning in hopes that it can be used in agriculture to produce many
copies of animals that have valuable qualities -- such as cows whose milk is
more nutritious or better for processing dairy foods. Cloning also could be
used to genetically engineer cows and sheep that can produce
pharmaceuticals in their milk.

It's been estimated that more than 100 cloned calves have been born from
fewer than 10 laboratories worldwide. In the United States, calves have been
cloned at Texas A&M, University of Wisconsin, University of Tennessee,
University of Connecticut and at several private companies.

The current technology used to produce clones in the laboratory is called
nuclear transfer because it is based on moving the nucleus of one cell into
another cell. The nucleus -- the center part of the cell that contains its DNA --
is withdrawn from an egg cell of one animal. Then a cell is taken from the skin
or other tissue of a donor animal of the same species and placed next to the
"empty" egg.

An electrical charge is then applied, causing the two cells to fuse together.
This transfers all of the genetic information that controls cellular development
from the nucleus of the donor cell to the fused egg and triggers cell division to
begin. The fused egg is placed in a lab dish with the appropriate nutrients.
Eventually, the resulting embryo -- which is a genetic copy of the animal that
donated the nucleus -- is transplanted into a surrogate mother.

The cloning research will continue at UC Davis with a half-dozen other cows
now in the very early stages of pregnancy with cloned embryos. Calves
resulting from those pregnancies would be born in early spring.


Steve Wingate, Webmaster
ANOMALOUS IMAGES AND UFO FILES
http://www.anomalous-images.com

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