Current:Home > ContactIndexbit-Meet Retro — the first rhesus monkey cloned using a new scientific method -Wealth Axis Pro
Indexbit-Meet Retro — the first rhesus monkey cloned using a new scientific method
Johnathan Walker View
Date:2025-04-10 04:12:41
Scientists in China on IndexbitTuesday announced that they have cloned the first healthy rhesus monkey, a two-year-old named Retro, by tweaking the process that created Dolly the sheep.
Primates have proved particularly difficult to clone, and the scientists overcame years of failure by replacing the cloned cells that would become the placenta with those from a normal embryo.
They hope their new technique will lead to the creation of identical rhesus monkeys that can be experimented on for medical research.
However, outside researchers warned that the success rate for the new method was still very low, as well as raising the usual ethical questions around cloning.
Since the historic cloning of Dolly the sheep using a technique called somatic cell nuclear transfer (SCNT) in 1996, more than 20 different animals have been created using the process, including dogs, cats, pigs and cattle.
However it was not until two decades later that scientists managed to clone the first primates using SCNT.
A pair of identical crab-eating macaques named Hua Hua and Zhong Zhong were created using SCNT in 2018 by researchers at the Chinese Academy of Sciences Institute of Neuroscience in Shanghai.
But that breakthrough, led by the institute's Qiang Sun, only resulted in live births in fewer than two percent of attempts.
Qiang was also a senior author of the new research published in the journal Nature Communications.
He told AFP that the team had extensively researched why previous efforts to clone the rhesus monkey (Macaca mulatta) had failed.
In an earlier attempt, one monkey -- out of 35 implanted fetuses -- was born alive, but it died in less than a day.
Qiang said that one of the "major problems" was that the placentas of cloned embryos were showing abnormalities compared to those from in vitro fertilization.
So the researchers replaced the cells that later become the placenta, which are called the trophoblast, with those from a healthy, non-cloned embryo.
The trophoblast cells provide nutrients to a growing embryo, and turn into the placenta that supplies oxygen and other life-supporting assistance to the fetus.
The technique "greatly improved the success rate of cloning by SCNT" and led to the birth of Retro, Qiang said.
"Extremely difficult to succeed"
However Lluis Montoliu, a scientist at the Spanish National Centre for Biotechnology who was not involved in the research, pointed out that just one out of 113 initial embryos survived, meaning a success rate of less than one percent.
"It is extremely difficult to succeed with these experiments, with such low efficiencies," Montoliu said in a statement to the U.K. Science Media Centre in London.
If human beings were to ever be cloned -- the great ethical fear of this field of research -- then other primate species would have to be cloned first, he said.
But so far, the poor efficiency of these efforts has "confirmed the obvious: not only was human cloning unnecessary and debatable, but if attempted, it would be extraordinarily difficult -- and ethically unjustifiable," Montoliu said.
Qiang emphasized that cloning a human being was "unacceptable" in any circumstance.
For the SCNT procedure, scientists remove the nucleus from a healthy egg, then replace it with another nucleus from another type of body cell.
The embryo therefore grows into the same creature that donated the replacement nucleus.
A female rhesus monkey named Tetra was cloned in 1999 using a different technique called embryo splitting.
But this simpler technique can only produce four clones at once.
Scientists have focused on SCNT in part because it can create far more clones, with the goal of creating identical monkeys to study a range of diseases as well as test drugs.
"We're seeing the beginning of the use of these cloned monkeys now. We want to use as few animals as possible to show drug efficacy, without the interference of genetic background," said Mu-ming Poo, director of the Institute of Neuroscience in the Chinese Academy of Sciences in Shanghai,
- In:
- China
- Science
veryGood! (5886)
Related
- What to know about Tuesday’s US House primaries to replace Matt Gaetz and Mike Waltz
- Dispatcher fatally shot in Arkansas ambulance parking lot; her estranged husband is charged
- Mets to retire numbers of Darryl Strawberry, Dwight Gooden, who won 1986 World Series
- Judge OKs updated Great Lakes fishing agreement between native tribes, state and federal agencies
- Kylie Jenner Shows Off Sweet Notes From Nieces Dream Kardashian & Chicago West
- In 'BS High' and 'Telemarketers,' scamming is a group effort
- India and Russia: A tale of two lunar landing attempts
- Bud Light goes on offense with NFL campaign, hopes to overcome boycott, stock dip
- Federal appeals court upholds $14.25 million fine against Exxon for pollution in Texas
- Grand jury declines to indict officer in fatal Kentucky police shooting of armed Black man
Ranking
- The Best Stocking Stuffers Under $25
- What exactly is colostrum, the popular supplement? And is it good for you?
- MLB's toughest division has undergone radical makeover with Yankees, Red Sox out of power
- In a rebuke to mayor, New Orleans puts a historic apartment out of her reach and into commerce
- Arkansas State Police probe death of woman found after officer
- Lala Kent Shares Surprising Take on Raquel Leviss' Vanderpump Rules Exit
- Jurors convict Alabama woman in 2020 beating death of toddler
- The downed Russian jet carried Wagner’s hierarchy, from Prigozhin’s No. 2 to his bodyguards
Recommendation
Which apps offer encrypted messaging? How to switch and what to know after feds’ warning
A CIA-backed 1953 coup in Iran haunts the country with people still trying to make sense of it
Jurors convict Alabama woman in 2020 beating death of toddler
The 6 most shocking moments and revelations from HBO's new Bishop Sycamore documentary
Trump's 'stop
Patricia Clarkson is happy as a 63-year-old single woman without kids: 'A great, sexy' life
Russian geneticist gets probation for DNA smuggling. Discovery of vials prompted alarm at airport
Pregnant Kourtney Kardashian Shares Look at Bare Baby Bump While Cuddling Up to Travis Barker