Weekend Herald

Jurassic Park

Crackdown over bird flu

- Sarah Knapton

Woolly mammoths could be brought back from extinction within two years. Scientists behind a ground- breaking resurrecti­on project are recreating a DNA blueprint of the Ice Age creatures.

Woolly mammoths — or, at least, animals with very similar DNA — could be brought back from extinction within two years, say scientists behind a ground- breaking resurrecti­on project.

Professor George Church, a worldrenow­ned geneticist, has been working with his team at Harvard University to recreate a DNA blueprint of the mammoth for the past t wo years using material from carcasses preserved in the Arctic permafrost.

They hope to isolate the genes that differenti­ate Ice Age mammoths from modern elephants — such as those responsibl­e for their shaggy coats — then splice mammoth genes with the genome of an elephant embryo to create a hybrid with the recognisab­le features of a mammoth.

Laboratory tests show that cells function normally with mammoth and elephant DNA and the Harvard team plans to grow a mammoth embryo in an artificial womb, rather than use a female elephant as a surrogate mother.

Since starting the project in 2015, the researcher­s have increased the number of “edits” where mammoth DNA has been spliced into the elephant genome from 15 to 45.

Church, who heads the Harvard Woolly Mammoth Revival team, said: “We’re working on ways to evaluate the impact of all these edits and trying to establish embryogene­sis.

“The list of edits affects things that contribute to the success of elephants in cold environmen­ts,” he said. “We already know about those to do with small ears, subcutaneo­us fat, hair and blood, but there are others that seem to be positively selected.”

He added: “Our aim is to produce a hybrid elephant- mammoth embryo. Actually it would be more like an elephant with a number of mammoth traits. We’re not there yet, but it could happen in a couple of years.”

The woolly mammoth, which is most closely related to the Asian, rather than African elephant, roamed Europe, Asia, Africa and North America during the last Ice Age and vanished some 4500 years ago, probably due to a climate change and hunting by humans.

“De- extinction” has become a realistic prospect due to revolution­ary gene editing techniques that allow precise selection and insertion of DNA taken from specimens found in Siberian ice.

Church helped develop the most widely used technique, which i s known as CRISPR/ Cas9, that has transforme­d genetic engineerin­g since it was first demonstrat­ed in 2012. It derives from a defence system bacteria used to fend off viruses and allows precise “cut and paste” manipulati­on of strands of DNA.

Dr Edze Westra, of the University of Exeter, said Church’s work “represents a massive opportunit­y”, but he added: “I’m not sure if it i s something we should be doing now, but it is definitely something that the technology offers.”

Some experts argue that the technology should be used to save animals that are still alive but in decline, rather than trying to bring back extinct creatures.

Dr Beth Shapiro, author of How to Clone a Mammoth, said scientists would never achieve a creature that was “100 per cent mammoth”. She added: “Elephants are an endangered species, and what if you could swap out a few genes for mammoth genes, not to bring the mammoth back but to allow them to live in colder climates.” Church said the mammoth project had two goals; to secure an alternativ­e future for the Asian elephant and to combat global warming. “They keep the tundra from thawing by punching through snow and allowing cold air to come in,” said Church. “In the summer they knock down trees and help the grass grow.” China is ordering the closure of live poultry markets in its south- central regions as it grapples with the worst outbreak of bird flu in years that has killed at least 87 people.

State media reported that the National Health and Family Planning Commission ordered closures anywhere with cases of the H7N7 strain.

Most reported cases have been found in the densely populated Yangtze and Pearl river deltas from Shanghai to Hong Kong. More than 250 cases have been reported.

The death toll since the start of the year has been unmatched since at least 2013.

In addition to the market closures, the commission i s training health workers in the screening, early diagnosis and treatment of the disease, while urging people to avoid contact with live birds.

H7N9 is considered to be less virulent than the H5N1 strain that the World Health Organisati­on has linked to hundreds of deaths worldwide over the last decade. H7N9 is not believed to be transmitte­d between humans, but rather by infected poultry.

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 ??  ?? Mammoths died out about 4500 years ago.
Mammoths died out about 4500 years ago.

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