Cloning To Clone, or Not to Clone? Revised May 2010.

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Presentation transcript:

Cloning To Clone, or Not to Clone? Revised May 2010

What is Cloning? Cloning Clone Process of making genetically identical copies to an original animal Clone An individual organism grown from a single body cell of its parent It is genetically identical to the parent whose cell it is grown from

How Cloning Benefits Us Cloned stem cells provide insight into fighting currently incurable human diseases Increased use of animal organs and products Create animals that are disease resistant More consistent food products Save endangered species

Concerns about Cloning Public perception Human cloning Expensive and inefficient Create resistance to vaccines and antibiotics Cloned products cannot be marketed Little is known about the life expectancy and chance for disease of cloned animals and offspring

Cloning Facts Plant cloning has been around for thousands of years Farm animal cloning has been around for over 20 years Cloning is a form of asexual reproduction Clones are not exact copies Cloned animals are safe to raise and eat

Cloning Fallacies Genetic make-up is altered Mutants are created Clones are unhealthy Will eventually lead to cloning humans Possible to recreate people such as Hitler

Brief History of Cloning 1902 Walter Sutton proves chromosomes hold genetic information German scientist Hans Spemann divides a salamander embryo Spemann proposes a “fantastical experiment”

Brief History of Cloning 1952: Briggs and King clone tadpoles 1953: Watson and Crick find the structure of DNA 1962: John Gurdon clones frogs from differentiated cells 1963: J.B.S. Haldane coins the term ‘clone’

Brief History of Cloning 1977: Karl Illmensee creates mice with only one parent 1984: Twinning creates genetic copies from embryonic cells 1996: First animal cloned from adult cells is born

History of the Cloning Process 1978: Splitting embryos 1986: Embryo Cloning 1994: Embryonic cell line cloning 1996: Adult or Somatic cell cloning

Dolly: Creating the First Cloned Animal Stage 1: Cell is collected from a donor sheep’s udder Stage 7: Embryo is placed into a third sheep, the surrogate mother Stage 2: Nucleus is removed from the unfertilized egg of a second sheep Stage 8: Dolly is born Stage 5: Electric charge is applied Stage 3: Udder cell is inserted into the egg with no nucleus Stage 4: Successful insertion Stage 6: Cell begins to divide

House Bill 2505: Human Cloning Prohibition Act Prohibition on human cloning Criminal Penalty: Up to 10 years imprisonment Civil penalty: Minimum 1 million dollar fine