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Cloning mammals: Current reality and future prospects
Authors:Clement L Markert
Institution:Department of Biology Yale University New Haven, Connecticut 06520 USA
Abstract:Animal husbandry would be well served by procedures that created new phenotypes by selective breeding and propagated them by cloning—that is by asexual or vegetative reproduction. Such reproductive patterns characterize some plants and some invertebrate animals. Even a few species of reptiles, amphibians, and fish exhibit parthenogenetic reproduction. Mammalian eggs can easily be provoked to develop parthenogenetically but no mammalian parthenote has ever developed to term. However the parthenote cells can be rescued by aggregating them with normal cells to make a chimera that can reach adulthood and reproduce using the parthenote cells. Replication and growth of embryos in vitro has led to twins or even quadruplets. Continued growth in vitro, as exemplified by teratocarcinomas, could lead to useful cloning. Nuclear transplantation, leading to cloning, can be carried out in mammals by using embryonic nuclei but this presents no economic advantage. Cloning with adult nuclei is not possible at present. Circumventing meiosis altogether, coupled with parthenogenesis, would lead to the most desirable mode of cloning, and this might be achieved through a series of mutations.
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