Mar. 7,
2013 — Using the technique that created Dolly the sheep, researchers from
the RIKEN Center
for Developmental Biology in Kobe ,
Japan have
identified a way to produce healthy mouse clones that live a normal lifespan
and can be sequentially cloned indefinitely.
Their study is
published today in the journal Cell Stem Cell.
In an
experiment that started in 2005, the team led by Dr. Teruhiko Wakayama has used
a technique called somatic cell nuclear transfer (SNCT) to produce 581 clones
of one original 'donor' mouse, through 25 consecutive rounds of cloning.
SNCT is a
widely used cloning technique whereby a cell nucleus containing the genetic
information of the individual to be cloned is inserted into a living egg that
has had its own nucleus removed. It has been used successfully in laboratory
animals as well as farm animals.
However, until
now, scientists hadn't been able to overcome the limitations of SNCT that
resulted in low success rates and restricted the number of times mammals could
be recloned. Attempts at recloning cats, pigs and mice more than two to six
times had failed.
"One
possible explanation for this limit on the number of recloning attempts is an
accumulation of genetic or epigenetic abnormalities over successive
generations," explains Dr. Wakayama.
To prevent
possible epigenetic changes, or modifications to DNA function that do not
involve a change in the DNA itself, Wakayama and his team added trichostatin, a
histone deacetylase inhibitor, to the cell culture medium. Using this
technique, they increased cloning efficiency by up to 6-fold.
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