Someone is going for it and the rush to produce the first living mammoth has clearly begun. This will lead to step by step advances and someday a real mammoth. Right now i expect that it all has a slim chance of working but we have certainly started the press coverage.
There has been little other followup from those elsewhere which suggests funding delays. In the meantime something tangible is happening here and even if it is a disappointment we will learn.
Maybe we can create a Refugio for them in the Chilcotin in which a substantial population can be built up. There is several million acres to work with there that would likely thrive with a few thousand mammoths.
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Mammoth DNA has been implanted into functioning elephant cells
Image: A frozen mammoth calf. Credit: The University of Michigan Museum of Paleontology
Mammoth DNA has been implanted into functioning elephant cells
And so it begins.
BEC CREW
24 MAR 2015
http://www.sciencealert.com/mammoth-dna-has-been-implanted-into-functioning-elephant-cells
Scientists have been discussing and debating over it for years, and now the first real step towards bringing the extinct woolly mammoth back from the dead is complete.
A renowned geneticist in the US has extracted DNA from the frozen remains of a long-dead mammoth found on Wrangel Island in the Arctic Ocean, created a synthetic replica of it, and implanted it into elephant cells that have been isolated in a petri dish, using a new technique of DNA splicing that allows for unprecedented accuracy. He reports that, so far, the altered elephant cells have been functioning perfectly.
Lead scientist George Church, a professor of genetics at Harvard University, and his team weren’t able to synthesise the entire woolly mammoth genome, but instead selected genes that encoded particularly ‘mammoth-like’ characteristics, such as cold-busting fat, ear size, and a woolly coat.
"We prioritised genes associated with cold resistance including hairiness, ear size, subcutaneous fat and, especially haemoglobin," Church told Ben Webster at The Sunday Times. Haemoglobin is what scientists think helped the mammoths survive such a frigid climate thousands of years ago. "We now have functioning elephant cells with mammoth DNA in them. We have not published it in a scientific journal because there is more work to do, but we plan to do so."
If Church’s experiments go as planned, this could be the first time we see a woolly mammoth alive in more than 3,300 years.
The technique used to join synthetic mammoth DNA fragments with the genetic code of an elephant is called CRISPR/Cas9, and while it’s been recently used to create transgenic organisms, this is the first time it’s been used on the DNA of an extinct organism.
The next step will be for the team to figure out how to replicate the process using elephant cells in situ, rather than in a petri dish. If they can do that using elephant eggs, they could theoretically produce an elephant with mammoth traits. But that’s a big “if”. And is that something we really want to do? As biologist Alex Greenwood from the Leibniz Institute for Zoo and Wildlife Research in the US told Sarah Knapton at The Telegraph:
"We face the potential extinction of African and Asian elephants. Why bring back another elephantid from extinction when we cannot even keep the ones that are not extinct around? What is the message? We can be as irresponsible with the environment as we want. Then we'll just clone things back?
Money would be better spent focusing on conserving what we do have than spending it on an animal that has been extinct for thousands of years."
Three separate teams around the world are working on resurrecting the woolly mammoth right now, so the ethical conversation might be too late, but at least we’re having it. It’s often pretty redundant to discuss how funds for one scientific experiment could be better served elsewhere because it’s a whole lot more complicated than that. But I think in this case it’s pretty valid. We’re never going to stop the mammoth revival train - unless of course we make it illegal - but anything to get endangered animals into the spotlight has to be valuable.
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