 |
Published by
 Australian Academy of Science
|

|
The mammal copiers advances in cloning
Box 2 | How Dolly the sheep was cloned
|
The scientists who produced Dolly used a technique that transferred
the nucleus from a cell of an adult sheep (the donor cell) into
an egg cell (the recipient cell). They obtained donor cells from
the udder of an adult sheep and recipient cells from other sheep.
Before the nucleus was transferred from the donor cell to the
recipient cell, the scientists used a high-powered microscope
and a very fine micropipette to suck out the recipient cell's nucleus. (Inside the nucleus are chromosomes, the packages that contain the cell's DNA.)
Each donor cell was then forced into a state of 'quiescence' -
where the DNA stops dividing and placed alongside a recipient
cell. The two cells were then encouraged to fuse by way of an
electric pulse. The recipient egg cell now had 'new' DNA that
of the donor cell with which to begin the process of cell division
and growth. It was implanted in the uterus of yet another sheep
and its progress monitored. Of the 277 original donor cells, only
29 made it to the stage of being implanted, and of those only
one Dolly went full term.
In 1998, several laboratories announced the successful cloning
of other species, although the rate of success remained low in
all cases. A University of Hawaii lab has produced dozens of cloned mice, using a variation of the nuclear replacement technique used with Dolly. Instead of fusing the donor and recipient cells, the researchers inserted the nucleus of the donar cell directly into the recipient cell. The cells from which the donor nucleus was extracted are naturally quiescent cells found in the ovary.
According to Ian Wilmut, the leader of the team that produced
Dolly, getting donor cells (or donor DNA) into a quiescent state
is essential because it allows the reprogramming of the adult
DNA. Nevertheless, scientists in a US lab claim they have produced
cloned calves without establishing quiescence beforehand.
Related sites
Other boxes
Box 1. Propagating plants
Box 3. On human cloning: A position statement from the Australian Academy of Science
|