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ArtArabia.com Sc. & Medicine
"Most people in the cloning field will be surprised by this," lead researcher Gerald Schatten said. "This work demonstrates there's a pothole in the process. We now know the depth and breadth of the pothole, and we're designing strategies to get around" it.
A cult group claimed in December to have cloned a person, something never verified. A doctor who separately is pursuing human cloning has reported in an Internet journal preliminary data on an early-stage cloned human embryo, but with no chromosome information. Cloning experts worry that attempting human cloning is dangerous not just because of all the barnyard clones with birth defects, but because attempts to clone monkeys -- far closer genetically to people -- using the Dolly technique so far have failed.
It took 277 attempts before Dolly was born. Schatten's group tried even longer to clone a rhesus monkey -- 724 eggs that yielded only 33 embryos and not a single pregnancy. For cells to divide properly, chromosomes must duplicate themselves and precisely line up along a zipperlike structure called a spindle. Once the chromosomes are in place, the spindle helps the cell pull apart into two. During human reproduction, if the chromosomes don't split properly, defects such as Down syndrome result, or the pregnancy fails. Schatten wondered if chromosome abnormalities were behind failed monkey clonings. Indeed, inside cloned monkey cells, the Pittsburgh researchers discovered deformed spindles and chaotic chromosome numbers. Why? Eggs harbor proteins that act as molecular motors that are key to spindle formation. In primates, those proteins are so tightly bound to the egg's DNA that cloning's first step of DNA removal pulls them out, too, dooming hope of later pregnancy, Schatten said. In other mammals, enough spindle-forming proteins float in the egg's remaining fluid for reproduction to occur, he said. © Copyright 2003 by ArtArabia.com |


