Opinion: Is a Clone Really Born at Age Zero?

More lessons from Dolly the sheep

Written byJosé Cibelli
| 6 min read

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Four 8-year old Finn-Dorset clones born in July 2007 and derived from the mammary-gland cell line that gave rise to DollyNATURE COMMUNICATIONS, K.D. SINCLAIR ET AL.In 1997, Dolly the sheep was introduced to the world by biologists Keith Campbell, Ian Wilmut, and colleagues. Not just any lamb, Dolly was a clone. Rather than being made from a sperm and an egg, she originated from a mammary gland cell of another, no-longer-living, 6-year-old [Finn-Dorset] ewe.

With her birth, a scientific and societal revolution was also born.

Some prominent scientists raised doubts; it was too good to be true. But more animals were cloned: first the laboratory mouse, then cows, goats, pigs, horses, even dogs, ferrets, and camels. By early 2000, the issue was settled: Dolly was real and cloning adults was possible.

The implications of cloning animals in our society were self-evident from the start. Our advancing ability to reprogram adult, already-specialized cells and start them over as something new may one day be the key to creating cells and organs that match the immune system of each individual patient in need of replacements.

But what somehow got lost was the fact that a clone was born—at day zero—created from ...

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