Monday, October 19, 2015

Woolly Mammoth DNA Successfully Spliced Into Elephant Cells



A group of researchers are getting closer to bringing the extinct woolly mammoth back to life. Geneticist George Church’s lab at Harvard University successfully copied genes from frozen woolly mammoths and pasted them into the genome of an Asian elephant.
Using a DNA editing tool called CRISPR, the scientists spliced genes for the mammoths’ small ears, subcutaneous fat, and hair length and color into the DNA of elephant skin cells. The tissue cultures represent the first time woolly mammoth genes have been functional since the species went extinct around 4,000 years ago.
The research has not yet been peer-reviewed or published in a scientific journal “because there is more work to do,” Church told the U.K.’s Sunday Times, “but we plan to do so.”
The work is part of an effort to bring extinct species back from the dead, a process called “de-extinction”. The recent breakthrough shows that one proposed de-extinction method--which involves splicing genes from extinct animals into the genomes of their living relatives--just might work. But don't believe the headlines suggesting woolly mammoth cloning is just around the corner. Church explained to Popular Science that there’s a lot more research to be done.
“Just making a DNA change isn’t that meaningful,” says Church. “We want to read out the phenotypes.” To do that, the team needs to figure out how to take the flat hybrid cells from a petri dish and coax them into becoming specialized tissues--such as blood cells or liver organoids--then test to see if they behave properly. For example, do the mammoth hair genes lead to hair that's the right color, length, and woolliness?
If those tests go well, the team hopes to turn the elephant/mammoth skin cells into hybrid embryos that can be grown in artificial wombs, devices that allow for pregnancies outside of an animal's uterus. Artificial wombs are pretty speculative at this point, but the alternative--implanting the hybrids into the wombs of female elephants--is unsavory to animal rights activists as well as geneticists. “It’s going to be more humane and easier if we can set up hundreds of [embryos] in an incubator and run tests,” says Church.
If they can get the hybrid creatures to survive, the project's first goal will be to engineer an elephant that can survive in cold temperatures. The team thinks that expanding the elephant’s range into colder climates could help keep it away from humans and the conflicts that are threatening to make Asian and African elephants extinct. Later, after the engineered elephants gain a foothold, Church says the team will try to revive the mammoths by integrating higher amounts of mammoth DNA into the hybrids.

Of course, it's possible the mammoth genome will never be completely reconstructed, and the creatures will only remain elephant/mammoth hybrids. But if it looks like a mammoth and fulfills the same ecological functions as a mammoth, is it a mammoth? What even is a mammoth, anyway?

10 comments:

  1. I think this is a great idea because the scientist want to expand the elephant’s range into colder climates could help keep it away from humans and the conflicts that are threatening to make Asian and African elephants extinct

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  2. I this its great to expand the elephant's range in different climates. I hope the scientists will be able to bring the mammoths back to life. Also other elephants could stop being overexploited.

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  3. I think this is a cool idea. I think its great that they want to put the hybrids in different climates so they don't effect the other elephants. I think it is cool that we can bring the mammoth sort of back to life.

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  4. This idea is cool. I think changing the climates would be amazing for the elephants and the upcoming hybrids. Bringing mammoths back would be awesome

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  5. I think that this is something very big. Me personally have a fascination with the mammoths anyways. I thought that in someway that they were in relation to the elephant and i love elephant to. This it would be good to expand the range of elephants. I just wonder when bringing back this animal how much would change in ecosystems and communities.. I still think this idea is good thought bc i love these animals.

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  6. I think this is a great idea. its great that they want to put the hybrids in different climates so they don't effect the other elephants. This it would be good to expand the range of elephants. I just wonder if the animal ever get brought back how much would it change in an ecosystem and communities

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  7. I think this is pretty awesome. They are possibly bringing an extinct animal back to life. Imagine what we can do if this actually happens, we could bring more animals out of extinction. Plus mammoths are pretty cool if you ask me with their big tusk and long fur. Imagine if we saw one at the zoo when we were little it would be breathe-taking.

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  8. I think this is a great idea! It would be cool to bring back extinct animals! Mammoths are so cute and furry! I would want to see one in the zoo if they are able to do this! It would probably change science!

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  9. I think that this is pretty cool and unique . Because there bringing a extinct animal back to life which has never happen before . If they really successfully bring the mammoth back to life think about how this will change science and how they could bring other thins back to life .

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  10. I think this whole study is so fascinating. For some reason I always thought that wooly mammoths had some type of relationship with the elephant, and then this study comes out. Being able to bring anything back to life in general is so crazy and awesome to me. hopefully I get to see one in real life if this is successful.

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