7 February 2009

Old Pets As New...

It's been ages since I posted. Maybe I should be using that Twitter thingy...

Anyway, I recently heard about a company in South Korea cloning puppies for people who have lost their beloved pets. This seems at first sight to be a great idea, the first of what I'm sure will become a long succession of "undo buttons" on life, but I'm not so sure.

Does anyone remember Dolly the sheep, cloned by the Roslin Institute in 1996? Dolly died early of a progressive lung disease found in much older sheep. The underlying problem is that genomes age, and as they do they become less able to repair themselves, leading to age-related diseases such as cancer, arthritis and so on. If you take the genome of, say, a five-year-old animal and create a newborn clone from it, that clone starts with a genetic age of five. It ages prematurely.

I can't help thinking that the joy felt by owners who have their dead pets cloned using today's techniques will be short-lived as they realise they may have created a replacement condemned to suffer an early death.

Stumble Upon Toolbar

2 comments:

  1. [i]"Maybe I should be using that Twitter thingy..."[/i]
    Welcome to the dark side :)

    ReplyDelete
  2. Aye - you need to plan for it well in advance; store DNA samples taken when your pet is young. That said, if they develop technology that can repair old genomes, then the applications will stretch much further than Fido II.

    ReplyDelete