Bangkok Post

Chinese claim monkey clone breakthrou­gh

Technology ‘could work on humans’

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SHANGHAI: Scientists in China have created the first monkeys cloned by the same process that produced Dolly the sheep more than 20 years ago, a breakthrou­gh that could boost medical research into human diseases.

The two long-tailed macaques ( Macaca fascicular­is) named Hua Hua and Zhong Zhong were born at the Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS) Institute of Neuroscien­ce in Shanghai, and are the fruits of years of research into a cloning technique called somatic cell nuclear transfer.

“The barrier has been broken by this work,” co-author Muming Poo, director of the Institute of Neuroscien­ce of CAS Center for Excellence in Brain Science and Intelligen­ce Technology, said.

Until now, the technique has been used to clone more than 20 different animal species, including dogs, pigs and cats, but primates have proven particular­ly difficult.

The birth of the now six- and eight-week old macaque babies also raises ethical questions about how close scientists have come to one day cloning humans.

Humans could be cloned, in principle, said Mr Poo, though this team’s focus was on cloning for medical research.

One day, the approach might be used to create large population­s of geneticall­y identical monkeys that could be used for medical research — and avoid taking monkeys from the wild.

“In the United States alone they are importing 30,000 to 40,000 monkeys each year by drug companies,” he said.

“Their genetic background­s are all variable, they are not identical, so you need a large number of monkeys. For ethical reasons I think having cloned monkey will greatly reduce the [number of ] monkeys used for drug tests.”

Monkeys are commonly used in medical research on brain diseases like Parkinson’s, cancer, immune and metabolic disorders.

“The method used for these experiment­s is similar to that used to clone Dolly,” in 1996 but with several “updates”, said William Ritchie, an embryologi­st on the team that cloned Dolly the sheep at the Roslin Institute of the University of Edinburgh.

The process involves removing the nucleus from a healthy egg, and replacing it with another nucleus from another type of body cell. The clone becomes the same as the creature that donated the replacemen­t nucleus.

“We tried several different methods, but only one worked,” said senior author Qiang Sun, Director of the Nonhuman Primate Research Facility at the Chinese Academy of Sciences Institute of Neuroscien­ces.

“There was much failure before we found a way to successful­ly clone a monkey.”

Adult donor cells were attempted, but those clones died within hours. What worked as replacemen­t nuclei were cells that came from foetal connective tissue.

Mr Poo said it took first author Zhen Liu, a postdoctor­al fellow, three years to perfect the procedure.

“The SCNT procedure is rather delicate, so the faster you do it, the less damage to the egg you have, and Dr Liu has a green thumb for doing this.”

Other monkeys have been cloned in the past, by a different and simpler technique called embryo splitting, which mimics how twins arise naturally.

The first primate ever cloned this way was Tetra, a rhesus monkey born in 1999.

Embryo splitting can produce a maximum of four at a time, while the new technique could in theory clone far more.

Still, the process that produced Hua Hua and Zhong Zhong remains “very inefficien­t and hazardous”, because the two babies were the only born from a group of 79 cloned embryos, said British scientists Robin Lovell-Badge, group leader of The Francis Crick Institute. “While they succeeded in obtaining cloned macaques, the numbers are too low to make many conclusion­s,” said Mr Lovell-Badge, who was not involved in the study.

 ?? EPA-EFE ?? Cloned macaques Zhong Zhong and Hua Hua at the non-humanprima­te research facility under the Chinese Academy of Sciences in Shanghai.
EPA-EFE Cloned macaques Zhong Zhong and Hua Hua at the non-humanprima­te research facility under the Chinese Academy of Sciences in Shanghai.

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