Dolly (5 July 1996 – 14 February 2003), a ewe, was the first mammal to have been successfully cloned from an adult cell. She was cloned at the Roslin Institute in Midlothian, Scotland, and lived there until her death when she was 6. Her birth was announced on 22 February 1997.
The sheep was originally code-named "6LL3". The name "Dolly" came from a suggestion by the stockmen who helped with her birth, in honor of Dolly Parton, because it was a mammary cell that was clonedBBC News. 2000. Listen to public, says Dolly scientist. The technique that was made famous by her birth is somatic cell nuclear transfer, in which a cell is placed in a de-nucleated ovum, the two cells fuse and then develop into an embryo. When Dolly was cloned in 1996 from a cell taken from a six-year-old ewe, she became the center of much controversy that still exists today.
On 9 April 2003 her stuffed remains were placed at Edinburgh's Royal Museum, part of the National Museums of Scotland.
Ian Wilmut's fame rests on being the first author on the 1997 Nature paper describing the work of cloning Dolly the sheep, implying that he had actually done the work of cloning Dolly, but his role in the project has since been disputed and remains in doubt (see below).
In March 2006 it was revealed that the scientists involved are in major disagreement over who deserves credit for Dolly.
In 2006, while testifying at an Edinburgh court following accusations of racial harassment of his fellow Prim Singh, Ian Wilmut denied the accusations, but acknowledged that he was not the 'father' or "creator" of Dolly, that he has minimised the role of some of his fellows, and he gave most of the credit (66% ) to Keith Campbell, while playing a "supervisory" or managerial role himself. Wilmut's credit in cloning Dolly the sheep is in doubt, but is less than 1/3rd as other people, in addition to Keith Campbell, did some of the work .
Although it is not certain, it can be inferred from Wilmut's own testimony in court and from the statements of Mr Bill Ritichie, one of the two technicians who did the nuclear transfer experiments, and from an anonymous source, to the Guardian newspaper, that without the intellectual input of Keith Campbell the group would still be trying to clone a sheep. This is because Keith Campbell had the crucial idea of co-ordinating the stages of the "cell cycle" of the somatic cells and eggs which was required for successful cloning.
See webpages from The Guardian, Daily Telegraph and The Scotsman newspapers in external links.
In 1999 research was published in the journal Nature suggesting that Dolly may have been susceptible to premature aging, due to shortened telomeres in her cells|journal=Nature|volume=399|issue=6734|pages=316-317}} BBC article. It was speculated that these were passed on from her donor sibling, who was six years old when the genetic material was taken from her, so that Dolly may have been genetically six years old at birth. This is because telomere length is reduced after each cell division, which requires DNA replication before mitosis occurs. The polymerase, part of the replication machinery, cannot reach the end of the chromosome being replicated and clips a little of the telomere at the end off every time replication occurs. However, Dr. Sean Lamb indicated that most cloned animals actually have telomeres of normal length and in serial clones the telomeres are actually getting longer in each successive generation. This is because the enzyme telomerase is active in those clones, which keeps the telomeres from shortening. However, telomerase, which is present in many bacteria, can be responsible for causing mutation through its enzymatic activity, which leads to cancer. In fact, in the course of carcinogenesis many human cancer cells produce telomerase, which is not normally present in adult human cells.
Possible signs of her condition were reported in January 2002, when Dolly was five years old. She had developed a potentially debilitating form of arthritis at an unusually early age. This supported the theory of premature senescence, although Dr. Dai Grove-White of the Faculty of Veterinary Science at Liverpool University was reported as saying, "Conceivably arthritis could be due to the cloning but equally it could not be. For all we know, she may have damaged her leg jumping over a gate and developed arthritis."
The arthritis further fueled worry among some that this form of cloning may not be appropriate for mammals, and there is now a consensus both in- and outside scientific community that at this point the risk of unforeseen effects of cloning on the clone makes experiments in human reproductive cloning premature and unethical.
Supporters of this method of cloning counter that the technique used to clone Dolly simply needs to be refined. However, others contend that with very limited understanding of the nascent field of applied genetics, scientists can not and should not attempt to control the action of so many genes at once. Many outside the scientific community have stated that this is vindication for their initial assertions that any form of cloning is ethically wrong and should be banned.
in the Guardian directly below.
in the Daily Telegraph directly below
in the Scotsman directly below
Sheep | Famous animals | Cloned animals | Cloning | History of Midlothian | Scottish inventions
Доли (овца) | Ovella Dolly | Dafad Doli | Fåret Dolly | Schaf Dolly | Oveja Dolly | Dolly (brebis) | Dolly | 돌리 | Domba Dolly | Dolly | הכבשה דולי | Avis Doli | Dolly (schaap) | ドリー (羊) | Owca Dolly | Ovelha Dolly | Dolly-lammas | Dolly (får) | 多利
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"Dolly the sheep".
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