First gene-altered primate beats the odds.Oregon researchers' triumph in slipping a bit of another creature's genome into a monkey has proved that the feat's possible, but even the bioengineers themselves caution that their technique may not be the best one for future monkey business. The Oregon Regional Primate Research Center in Beaverton ignited a news frenzy last week with a 3-month-old rhesus monkey's debut as the world's first genetically engineered genetically engineered adjective Recombinant, see there primate. Named ANDi, a backward homage to "inserted 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. ," the little fellow looks and behaves like his plain-gene playmates. Yet tissue analysis confirms that ANDi carries a jellyfish jellyfish, common name for the free-swimming stage (see polyp and medusa), of certain invertebrate animals of the phylum Cnidaria (the coelenterates). The body of a jellyfish is shaped like a bell or umbrella, with a clear, jellylike material filling most of the gene laboriously inserted by scientists, Anthony W.S. Chan, Gerald Schatten Gerald P. Schatten is a Jewish American stem cell researcher at the University of Pittsburgh. His research during the last years has mainly focused on human reproduction and development and on the potential molecular medical therapies that use stem cell and gene therapy. , and their colleagues report in the Jan. 14 SCIENCE. The National Institute of Child Health and Human Development in Bethesda, Md., one of the funders of the project, greeted the success enthusiastically. The institute's interest, explains its director, Duane Alexander, comes from hopes of putting medically important genes into primates to create new models for research on human diseases. Getting a gene into a primate for the first time, regardless of what gene it is, "breaks a technical barrier," Alexander notes. To deliver the foreign gene, the ANDi team turned to a crippled retrovirus retrovirus, type of RNA virus that, unlike other RNA viruses, reproduces by transcribing itself into DNA. An enzyme called reverse transcriptase allows a retrovirus's RNA to act as the template for this RNA-to-DNA transcription. that can insert DNA without causing infection. Schatten says the group chose the method because, despite drawbacks, it has a good record for incorporating foreign genes into a target's genome, an advantage in animals less prolific than mice. To test gene delivery, the researchers selected a gene that gives a jellyfish its glow. The team hitched this green fluorescent protein "EGFP" redirects here. EGFP may also refer to the ICAO airport code for Pembrey Airport. The green fluorescent protein (GFP) is a protein, comprised of 238 amino acids (26,9 kDa), from the jellyfish Aequorea victoria (GFP GFP Green Fluorescent Protein GFP Generic Framing Procedure GFP Government Furnished Property GFP Generic Frame Protocol GFP General Framing Procedure GFP Global Functional Plane GFP Global Field Power GFP Grandmothers for Peace GFP Glutton for Punishment ) gene to the viral carrier and injected the construct into 224 monkey eggs. They fertilized fer·til·ize v. fer·til·ized, fer·til·iz·ing, fer·til·iz·es v.tr. 1. To cause the fertilization of (an ovum, for example). 2. the eggs with normal sperm and implanted 20 pairs of embryos into surrogate mothers. From the six resulting pregnancies, the team celebrated three healthy births. Two miscarried fetuses had the GFP gene, and hair shafts and fingernails of one of them glowed green in fluorescent light. Of the live babies, only ANDi seems to carry the gene, but there's no sign of jellyfish protein in him. And it's about 4 years too early to tell if he'll transmit the gene to his offspring. Mouse-cloning specialist Kevin Eggan of the Whitehead Institute in Cambridge, Mass., says, "It's exciting that they were able to do this," but he predicts the next steps may be much harder. Headed by Rudolph Jaenisch, the lab where he works relied on a similar system to create transgenic mice 30 years ago. Modern mouse engineers have turned to other methods because the retrovirus doesn't handle big genes well and the genes it transfers often get silenced. Schatten responds that he's not restricting his research to retroviral vectors. "We fully agree with experts who recognize the limitations," he says. "This is the first step." |
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