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Scientists plan to create ‘chimeras’ in last-ditch bid to save rhinos

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A revolutionary form of cloning is to be used as part of a last-ditch effort to save one of the world’s rarest animals - the northern white rhino - which is on the brink of extinction with only a few individuals left in the wild.

British scientists are to spearhead an attempt to preserve the genes of a
rhino in captivity by using a technique that mixes its skin cells with the
embryos of a close cousin, the southern white rhino, which is not so
endangered. The resulting offspring will be “chimeras” with a
mixture of cells from both sub-species, but it is hoped that some of them
will grow up to produce the sperm and eggs of the northern white rhino and
so boost the animal’s dwindling gene pool.

If the pioneering experiment is successful, the biologists hope to extend
the technique to a wide range of other endangered species whose populations
in the wild are severely depleted as a result of hunting and habitat loss.

Specialists at the Royal Zoological Society of Scotland and the University
of Edinburgh
are putting the plan together, with the help of
conservationists in the field, who have warned the days of the northern
white rhino are numbered with just three or four animals left in the
grasslands of north-east Africa. Ian Wilmut, who led the team that cloned
Dolly the sheep, is part of the research project and has stated that the new
technique is more promising and practical than the cloning method he used in
his famous breakthrough more than 10 years ago.

Professor Robert Millar, the director of the Medical Research Council’s
Reproductive Sciences Unit at Edinburgh University, who is leading the
study, said: “There are a lot of African animals under the threat of
extinction. We want to protect their genomes, but you have to protect their
habitats as well. This is one of the ways of dealing with the problem,
especially when the animals get to such low numbers in the wild. It is a
method we need to start to get into place as an insurance policy - it’s
clearly do-able according to the laboratory work.”

Scientists plan to take small samples of skin from the few northern white
rhinos kept in captivity, as well as any animals temporarily captured in the
wild, and transform them into embryonic-like cells using a new
genetic-engineering technique extensively tested on laboratory mice.

The technique involves altering a few regulatory genes, which has the effect
of “reprogramming” the adult skin cells back to an embryonic state
so that it can then develop into any of the specialised tissues of the body
- including the germ-line cells that give rise to sperm and eggs.

One scientist warned that the technique of induced pluripotent stem (iPS)
cells could even be used on human beings by maverick IVF doctors wanting to
help infertile couples, because it has proved so easy to use on mice with
few apparent side-effects.

Robert Lanza, the chief scientific officer of the American biotechnology
company Advanced Cell Technology in Massachusetts, also said he is
collaborating with Chinese scientists to use iPS stem cells on the giant
panda as part of a conservation programme. “The technology could have
enormous value in conservation biology. In fact, we have work currently
underway using iPS cells to rescue endangered animals,” Dr Lanza said.

“We also have an agreement with the Chinese Giant Panda Breeding Group
to work with them to use reprogramming techniques to convert giant panda
cells - skin or other tissue samples they have stored - into iPS cells in
order to rescue genes that would otherwise be lost from the planet forever,”
he added.

The Medical Research Council’s human reproductive sciences unit is going to
work closely with Edinburgh Zoo on breeding technologies that could be used
to conserve endangered species, such as the African wild dog, the Ethiopian
wolf and the pygmy hippo. A new body called the Institute for Breeding Rare
and Endangered African Mammals
has been set up in the Scottish capital to
bring a number of scientists together to share experience and resources.

Paul de Sousa, a stem-cell specialist at Edinburgh University, said that all
mammals appear to share the same genes that can be engineered to reprogramme
skin cells to induce iPS cells and that it should be possible to use the
technique on the northern white rhino. “No one has done this before,
but I’m confident that it can be done. You’d aggregate the cells in an
embryo and what you would create would be a chimera of the rhino,” Dr
de Sousa said.

Conservation biology experts said the problems associated with using the
tissue of endangered animals are formidable. “If it’s going to work,
it’s still a long way off … It’s going to be very difficult,” said
Professor Bill Holt, of the Zoological Society of London.

- Steve Connor

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admin @ April 18, 2008

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