Cloning extends life of cells--and cows?Last year, the scientists who created Dolly the cloned sheep raised the concern that she was aging prematurely. Their fear was prompted by the finding that protective tips on her chromosomes seemed shorter than normal for a lamb her age. A new study of cloned cows counters that disquieting dis·qui·et tr.v. dis·qui·et·ed, dis·qui·et·ing, dis·qui·ets To deprive of peace or rest; trouble. n. Absence of peace or rest; anxiety. adj. Archaic Uneasy; restless. finding, however. It even suggests that cloning can create cells, and perhaps animals, that thrive longer than normal. In the April 28 SCIENCE, Robert P. Lanza of Advanced Cell Technology in Worcester, Mass., and his colleagues report that they've cloned cows from aged cells. They find that cells from the clones have longer DNA DNA: see nucleic acid. DNA or deoxyribonucleic acid One of two types of nucleic acid (the other is RNA); a complex organic compound found in all living cells and many viruses. It is the chemical substance of genes. tips, or telomeres, than the original cells and show other signs of youthfulness. One telomere telomere /telo·mere/ (tel´o-mer) an extremity of a chromosome, which has specific properties, one of which is a polarity that prevents reunion with any fragment after a chromosome has been broken. researcher says that the new data should dispel concerns that clones will die earlier than normal. "It provides great reassurance," says Robert A. Weinberg of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology Massachusetts Institute of Technology, at Cambridge; coeducational; chartered 1861, opened 1865 in Boston, moved 1916. It has long been recognized as an outstanding technological institute and its Sloan School of Management has notable programs in business, . Lanza suggests that his group's use of cells that have survived a long time may have a benefit. "Cloning from cells with a long life span may lead to animals with a long life span," he speculates. Whether the cloned cows will enjoy extra years--and Weinberg expresses skepticism--cells from the animals do keep dividing in lab dishes longer than normal. Achieving the same result with human cells could have important medical benefits. In a strategy called therapeutic cloning therapeutic cloning n. A procedure in which damaged tissues or organs are repaired or replaced with genetically identical cells that originate from undifferentiated stem cells. , scientists would like to use a person's DNA to generate immature cells that they could then coax into forming nerve, muscle, heart, liver, or any other needed tissue. Scientists had been concerned that cells created through therapeutic cloning would exhaust their proliferative ability before producing enough specialized cells. The new findings may eliminate that worry. "The extended life span of [cloned] cells could lead to a billionfold, if not even trillionfold, increase in the number of replacement cells we can use for tissue engineering and transplantation," says Lanza. Questions swirling around Dolly's telomeres and her true age motivated the new research. Whenever most cells divide, their telomeres shrink, which has led many scientists to view the dwindling dwin·dle v. dwin·dled, dwin·dling, dwin·dles v.intr. To become gradually less until little remains. v.tr. To cause to dwindle. See Synonyms at decrease. tips as a ticking clock that reflects a cell's age. Some scientists dispute that, however, and others contest that the buildup build·up also build-up n. 1. The act or process of amassing or increasing: a military buildup; a buildup of tension during the strike. 2. of aged cells with shrunken shrunk·en v. A past participle of shrink. shrunken Verb a past participle of shrink Adjective reduced in size Adj. 1. telomeres explains the overall aging of an animal. In their work, Lanza and his colleagues grew cow skin cells in the laboratory. As expected, after about 50 to 60 doublings, the cells became larger and underwent other physical changes marking their entry into a nondividing stage called senescence senescence /se·nes·cence/ (se-nes´ens) the process of growing old, especially the condition resulting from the transitions and accumulations of the deleterious aging processes. se·nes·cence n. . Scientists have theorized that this transition occurs when telomeres shrink to a certain length (SN: 1/17/98, p. 37). To see if senescent se·nes·cent adj. Growing old; aging. cells could be used to make a clone, the investigators transferred the genes from these cells into cow eggs stripped of their DNA. Surprisingly, the success rate proved comparable to cloning experiments that begin with younger cells. Moreover, when the scientists examined skin cells from the clones, they found that the telomeres were longer than those of the original senescent cells and even longer than those of typical newborn calves. One cloned cow that's now 2 years old has the telomeres of a calf, says Lanza. Also, a gene normally turned off in senescent cells was even more active in cells of the clones than in normal young cells. Finally, instead of doubling only 50 to 60 times in lab dishes, cells from the clones divided around 90 times before becoming senescent. Lanza suggests that his team's use of senescent cells, which represent proven survivors, explains the general boost in cellular longevity in the cloned animals. |
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