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The research has not yet been peer-reviewed or published in a scientific journal “because there is more work to do,” Church told the U.K.’s Sunday Times, “but we plan to do so.”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?

26 comments:

  1. I feel the same way I did with the frogs last week, once something is dead it should remain dead. It's cool that there is a way to fix extinction of species that are needed in our environment. However, what purpose would a wooly mammoth serve? I understand you need to start somewhere to test the theories and research to be able to bring back other species but would bringing back wooly mammoths be that good of an idea?

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  2. If the wooly mammoth died before how is it going to stay alive now. Are we going to have to constantly fight to keep it alive. I think bringing some animals back from extinction will do more harm than good. The animals that have been gone for years are going to eat more of the animals that we may need more. I understand bringing some species back from extinction, but a lot of it will probably harm the environment more than it will help anything.

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  3. I agree with Emily, once something's dead forever it should stay that way. Though it would be cool to see one at zoo. Which I probably never see if it existed because I don't agree with keeping animals in captivity. Lets keep things the way they are with the mammoth scientists!!

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  4. I agree with Emily and Jasmine. I don't thing bringing something back to life. We really don't want no Woolly Mammoth apocalypse. I don't think they would survive the conditions we live in now. But i do think it's a good idea for the elephants to live in a colder climate due to the close extinction. I really don't want them to be extinct, they are awesome. I wonder if they can bring the woolly mammoths back to life... what else can they do? Create real vampires? maybe even werewolves? That would be cool. We'd have Twilight come to life. #teamjacob

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  5. I feel like as scientist advance in investigations, they become unaware of the possible side effects from their solutions. If they bring back the Woolly Mammoths, there would be more competition with the existing predators of their prey. Like everyone else is saying, when an animal is extinct, it should stay extinct. Will this have long term effects in the future for these animals, or will everything be just like how it was before they went extinct?

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  6. This idea sounds cool, but the mammoth will not be able to tolerate any habitat. As in, it has been extinct for so long that it's simple instincts will question itself and will have no idea on how to survive on it's own. Plus, where would they store the mammoth, I mean the temperatures then and now, differ by a large range. So even if the mammoth were to stay, would it live long?

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  7. I love elephants, and it would be cool to have scientists revive their ancestors. I hope I'm able to live to that moment, so I can see one in person. This sounds so cool.

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  8. The idea of mammoths roaming the Earth again is pretty cool, but they've literally been extinct for thousands of years; how will they fit in the ecosystem now?? Many things have changed since then and they will more than likely disrupt the now-peaceful things.
    Mammoths once roamed the Great Plains, which now, has many interstates running through it, farming being done,houses being built, etc. So where exactly would they comfortably live?

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  9. I think wooly mammoths are really cool from what Ive read about them, but not cool enough to bring back from the dead. Just think of how this could affect our animals. How well will they be able to adjust to their eosystem. In my opinion, I think they are better off extinct.

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  10. I have heard about this once before. I think wooly mammoths are great and cool but they might have been exintct for a good purpose. The advances in technology and sciences are great and may do many other great things. I think there should be more focus on other ideas rather than bringing back species.

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  11. I think Wooly Mammoths seem pretty cool. But, I agree that once an animal is dead, it should stay dead. It would probably disrupt the ecosystem. Also, they have been extinct for a very long time. It seems to be a lot of work to bring back species, and I think scientists could be doing soemthing better. This is the first time I have heard of the term de-extinction.

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  12. This could be cool. But again, wouldn't this effect our biosphere a lot? Once something's dead it should remain dead. It wouldn't have a natural predator and would probably eat everything.

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  13. I still don't feel good about bringing things back from the dead. I feel like they are just asking for some kind of crazy zombie apocalypse or something (idk, crazy things can happen). Now they are messing with the elephants that are still alive and what happens when something goes wrong and they kill off the entire elephant population? They will just make a bigger mess. I think they should just leave them all alone. What happens when one day they really do bring the woolly mammoths back and they start killing humans? Something to think about.

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  14. I think that this is really cool and all but what will the mammoth do when we bring it back to life. Will it run around killing things or will it have a calm docile behavior? I don't know and I don't think these scientists have thought that far ahead to be honest.

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  15. I think this could be a good and a bad idea. Wooly mammoths are awesome and it would be so cool to see them in the wild. The bad thing is that they could become an invasive species and throw a wrench into the ecosystem they are introduced into. We could put them in an area like Alaska or Greenland that is cold but still has vegetation. There is no telling what could happen until the time comes but I guess it is happening whether we want it to or not.

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  16. I think this is really cool, but it could be really dangerous, don't you think? We have no idea what could happen if we brought them back. And I some way this all is freaking, how they can do this. But I've always found this stuff cool and exciting. If we knew the effects of bringing them back then I'd support this 100%. It's really amazing that they may be able to this though.

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  17. Why are scientists still playing with life? I don't understand why they push the boundaries of life to it's limits. Once something is extinct or dead, it's meant to stay like that. Us humans have already cheated death in advancements in of agriculture and science. Mainly medicine. But this is going too far. There's no reason to recreate this specie. If you truly need a specie to be recreated, then make sure it's for a good cause like medicine for cures of cancer. Not for these simple minded reasons.

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  18. Its pretty cool that our technology is capable enough to bring back organisms that had been extinct for 4000 years. Its a cool thought but i don't think its appropriate. Whats the point of bringing back this animal? Whats the possibility of other extinct animals being reborn?

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  19. I think its kind of weird that scientists are so fascinated with deceased organisms. They never know if their "reincarnation" of the wooly mammoth could backfire some how. Wouldnt this affect the way elephants live?

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  20. I think that bringing extinct animals back to life can be harmful to the environment. It seems cool, and at the same time it seems weird. I just hope scientists know what they are doing with all this new technology in their hands.

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  21. Okay, sit down, buckle up, and get ready for my rant. "What even is a mammoth?" Well, a woolly mammoth is only one of the coolest creatures to have ever graced the planet earth. Now I openly support bringing these majestic beasts back from extinction. As such, I refer to myself as a Mammoth Revivalist. Now, I could tell you this was for some great crusade to give lost life another chance. Honestly speaking though, it's because I wanna smack a sadde or something on the back of one, and ride it like a gigantic, somewhat intimidating horse. Ever heard of Hannibal Barca? Guy who led an army of elephants over the Alps? Yeah, think of that with Mammoths. Now don't get me wrong, I recognize the ecological dangers extinction implies, and the personal/physical dangers of attempting to ride one of these. So....maybe we could end up completely ruining an ecosystem or two. But in the long one, what's a few biomes worth is comparison to having an army of War Mammoths?

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  22. Ok so I think this is amazing but it comes with some consequences. I mean there is a reason they went extinct. These animals are not some minor animals these animals could destroy entire ecosystems on their own. Also this knowledge is priceless in the use to clone and make other species.

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  23. I truly hope this happens fast. One can only imagine the possibilities once they start selling these things. People will finally ditch their cars to ride saddleback on a mammoth, the future is here!

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  24. Why would they want to bring these things back? They went extinct for a specific reason. If we was to bring them back, they would probably quickly become extinct once again. Their bodies are not built for today's world.

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  25. I had seen this idea before when i was younger and i believed that this would have been the coolest thing ever. If these anmals lived dueing the Ice Age and had became extinct no telling what would happen in this generation. Now that I am a more successful thinker, I now believe this is a poor idea and the experiment should not be conducted.

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  26. why does everyone want to bring things back to life? there is a reason behind everything. so if this thing was brought back it could have an big negative impact in everything today.

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