Scientific News Biology Biotechnologies AGGREGATION OF CLONED MOUSE EMBRYOS IMPROVES SURVIVAL RATE
AGGREGATION OF CLONED MOUSE
EMBRYOS IMPROVES SURVIVAL RATE
Scientists at the University of Pennsylvania have
found a novel way to boost the paltry survival rate of cloned mammals: When two
genetically identical cloned mouse embryos are combined, the aggregate embryo is
considerably more likely to survive to birth.
A team from Penn's School of Veterinary Medicine
reports the results in the Oct. 1 issue of the European Molecular Biology
Organization Journal.
"At the blastocyst stage, an early embryonic
stage just prior to implantation, mouse clones typically have a much lower than
normal number of cells," said corresponding author K. John McLaughlin,
assistant professor of animal biology. "When we combined two clones at the
four-cell stage, the embryos showed a remarkable improvement in viability, much
greater than expected from the sum of their parts."
Despite the successful cloning of sheep, pigs,
cats and most recently rats, mammalian cloning -- in which an ordinary cell's
nucleus is transferred to an egg whose nucleus has been removed -- remains
remarkably inefficient. Of every 100 cloned mice, roughly one survives to birth.
The researchers found that when the clone hybrids
were transferred back into the uteri of recipient mice, the survival rate jumped
to 8 percent. The researchers even produced a litter of four cloned mouse pups,
in stark contrast to the typical single pup born.
Cloning requires the precise genetic
reprogramming of the nucleus inserted into an enucleated egg. This nucleus must
abandon its former genetic program and adopt the genetic profile of an embryonic
nucleus; failure to do so dooms the embryo.
"The paper provides a new insight into
reprogramming following nuclear transfer," said Davor Solter, a
developmental biologist at the Max-Planck Institute of Immunobiology who was not
involved in this work. "It confirms indirectly that every cloned embryo is
actually different and that reprogramming is random. It seems that two embryos
which are epigenetically different can positively interact and complement each
other leading to correct temporal and spatial gene expression. That this type of
interaction can take place was not obvious and it could only be demonstrated by
the described approach."
McLaughlin and his colleagues aren't yet sure why
the aggregation of cloned embryos boosts survival, although one theory is that
the combination of two embryos helps compensate for genetic deficiencies in
either.
"The genetic reprogramming of a cloned
embryo never seems to occur with 100 percent accuracy," he said. "However,
the group of genes that fails to reset properly differs in each individual
embryo, meaning that each embryo that contributes to an aggregate can help mask
the shortcomings of the other. By combining cloned embryos, you might end up
with an embryo that's 99 percent reprogrammed rather than just 90 percent."
When McLaughlin and colleagues cut wild-type
mouse embryos in half, they found that the expression of key developmental genes
was not affected, suggesting that the developmental deficiencies of cloned
embryos are not due to low cell counts alone. They speculate that cells in a
blastocyst may communicate in a way that is compromised in a smaller cloned
embryo.
McLaughlin's co-authors on the EMBO Journal paper
include Michele Boiani, Sigrid Eckardt, N. Adrian Leu and Hans R. Schöler,
all of Penn's Center for Animal Transgenesis and Germ Cell Research. Their work
was funded by the Marion Dilley and David George Jones Funds, the Commonwealth
and General Assembly of Pennsylvania, the National Institutes of Health, the
University of Pennsylvania Research Foundation and the United States Department
of Agriculture.
###
Contact: Steve Bradt, bradt@pobox.upenn.edu,
215-573-6604, University
of Pennsylvania
The source of the given news and copyrights
belong to
the University
of Pennsylvania
Publishing date: October 7, 2003
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