GenomeWeb caught
what must be an interesting Q&A with George Church in Germany’s Spiegel
Online (I can’t personally attest to the original story as it is
behind a paywall). The Harvard Medical School geneticist is quoted as saying
that eventually, an “adventurous female human” will be needed to be the
surrogate mother for the first Neanderthal baby in some 30,000 years.
This
isn’t the first time Church has talked publically about cloning a Neanderthal,
or at least a near-Neanderthal. In 2009, when the Neanderthal genome was first
reported, the New York Times described a
scenario in which a current day human genome could be tweaked into the
“Neanderthal equivalent” with tools of molecular biology. Eventually, this
could lead to a Neanderthal-like embryo in need of a surrogate mother.
While
the idea of reviving Neanderthals may sound farfetched, take for example the
work of biologists to clone endangered or extinct non-human animals (see “Stem-Cell
Engineering Offers a Lifeline to Endangered Species”). In 2009, the extinct
bucardo, a subspecies Spanish ibex, was
cloned from a frozen skin sample. The newborn died immediately due to
respiratory failure, but its birth suggests that resurrecting extinct species
may be possible.
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