World’s first cloned, glowing rabbit to reproduce soon

By Xinhua

Shanghai(China) : Chinese scientists are expecting the world’s first cloned rabbit will be able to reproduce in three months.


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The genetically-modified cloned rabbit, born in a hospital affiliated to Shanghai Jiaotong University’s medical school Sep 14, glows green under a fluoroscope, a result of being injected with special genes. Scientists hope this special trait will be transferred to the rabbit’s offspring.

The unnamed female rabbit weighed 1.4 kilograms at three months time, the average age for rabbits to enter puberty, said Chen Xuejin, a professor with Jiaotong University’s medical school.

For safety considerations, he said, the rabbit would not start mating until it was six months old.

The rabbit is the world’s first to be cloned using “fibroblast” cells from a foetal rabbit and will be used to research causes of human diseases, said Chen, head of the research team.

Chen and his colleagues began the test by extracting glowing protein genes from a jellyfish. The gene was transplanted into the rabbit’s fibre cells before the genetically modified cell was injected into a rabbit’s embryo.

They then placed the reconstructed embryo into the uterus of a female rabbit. After 30 days of gestation, the cloned creation was born through caesarean section.

Researchers found a rabbit, which had just given birth and put the cloned bunny in the same cage as her and the other newborns. The clone rabbit ate radish and green vegetables like its peers.

Chen said his research team had produced other rabbits using the same technology, but most of them had died shortly after being born.

“Even the longest surviving cloned bunny didn’t outlive the weaning age, around the fifth week,” he said.

As rabbits share similar genes with humans, the genetically-modified clone rabbit is expected to be used for research into cardiovascular and eye diseases as well as some genetic ailments, said Li Shangang with the Chinese Academy of Agricultural Sciences.

Scientists have cloned mice, cattle and other animals since the first cloned sheep, Dolly, was born in 1996. Malaysia is trying to clone some of its threatened leatherback turtles to save them from extinction.

In 2002, French scientists produced the world’s first cloned rabbit using cells from an adult female rabbit.

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