Today’s Solutions: November 23, 2024

Even before Jurassic Park, many have fantasized about cloning endangered animals. Science fiction made this seem too simple, easily copying a complex creature from recovered DNA. Now, that fantastical process is not so far off. 

Researchers have cloned the world’s first mice from freeze-dried skin cells, giving hope and an insurance policy to naturalists and conservationists around the world. 

Cloning and preserving species

With so many animals and species at risk, this discovery is a valuable safeguard against extinction. 

This process is unique because it uses freeze-drying to store skin cells, whereas before samples were kept using liquid nitrogen, which is expensive and risky. If conditions aren’t kept just so with liquid nitrogen, cells melt and become unstable. Also, being able to reliably keep skin cells means that almost all species can have a chance at cloning since freeze-drying samples like sperm isn’t an option for all species. 

“If these cells can be preserved without liquid nitrogen using freeze-drying technology, it allows genetic resources from around the world to be stored cheaply and safely,” said Prof Teruhiko Wakayama who led the work at the University of Yamanashi in Japan. “Developing countries will be able to store their own valuable genetic resources in their own countries. Also, even in endangered species where only males survive, this technology can be used to create females to revive the species.”

Freezing for the future

In the latest research, scientists kept freeze-dried skin cells from the tails of mice for nine months before attempting to use them to make clones. The process kills the cells, but scientists were still able to create early-stage embryos from them. These were used to create stem cells which were inserted into mouse eggs and then inserted into surrogate mice to gestate. 

The first cloned mouse was named Dorami, after a robot in the Doraemon Manga series. Dorami was followed by 74 others, who were proven to be healthy when they bred with others. The process still needs some work, as it kills the skin cells and healthy female and male mouse pups can only be created with a 0.2 to 5.4% success rate. 

Still, the development bodes well for other ongoing attempts to clone at-risk and endangered species, such as the black-footed ferret, whose genetic diversity scientists are trying to boost. 

Source Study: Nature CommunicationsHealthy cloned offspring derived from freeze-dried somatic cells | Nature Communications

Solutions News Source Print this article
More of Today's Solutions

This Canadian didn’t want to fly from Germany to Canada—so he took a cargo ship

When Will Vibert’s European work visa was closing in on its expiration date, the Canadian was reluctant to travel back to Vancouver via plane. ...

Read More

Simple movement is connected to better brain health in older adults

It goes without saying that practicing regular exercise offers plentiful benefits for our overall health, but as we age, engaging in the same exercise ...

Read More

Passive cooling techniques reduce AC strain by up to 80 percent

In the summer months, many of us are of two minds: we’re dying to keep it cool, but we’re also dying not to spend ...

Read More

Making windows bird-friendly: a crash course on protecting our feathered friends

In 1990, Michael Mesure was on the way to a wildlife rehabilitation center. Among his passengers was a common yellowthroat, a colorful warbler that ...

Read More