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by Jonathan B Weitzman

RESEARCH ROUND-UP

Nuclear reprogramming in cloned cows
Donor nuclei from somatic cells are reprogrammed in cloned bovine embryos to restore normal telomere length.

Email: Jonathan B Weitzman - jonathanweitzman@hotmail.com
News from The Scientist 2001, 2(1):20010207-01

Published 7 February 2001

Telomere length shortens upon culture of fibroblast cells in vitro. But what happens to chromosomal ends and telomerase activity when nuclei from these aged cells are used to clone animals by somatic nuclear transfer? In the January 30 Proceedings of the National Academy of Science Betts et al. report on telomeres and telomerase activity in early and late-passage donor fibroblasts and recipient cloned bovine embryos (Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 2001, 98:1077-1082). Despite the reduction in telomere length in older bovine fibroblasts and ES-like cells, telomerase is reprogrammed in the early cloned blastocysts and telomere length is restored whatever the nuclei source. These results support earlier studies showing that bovine cloning rejuvenates old cells, in contrast to the telomere shortening that has been observed in cloned sheep.


 

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