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The future of animal cloning
Posted by: Prof. Dr. M. Raupp (IP Logged)
Date: August 17, 2007 06:26AM

By Fiona Roberts
Since the birth of Dolly the sheep 11 years ago, cloning technologies
for animals have been getting better and better. But are we ready to clone
our pets or eat meat or other products from cloned livestock or their
offspring? The BBC Radio 4 series Peas in a Pod has taken a look at the
current state of animal cloning and where it might be heading.
Animals are already being cloned commercially.

It's on a small scale and mostly for producing copies of individual
animals of very high value - whether emotional or commercial.

But a ruling by the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) at the end
of this year could change that.

If the ruling, as expected, allows animal products from clones and
their offspring to enter the human food chain then agricultural cloning is
set to take off.

Growing clientele

Finding out exactly who is doing what and where in the world of
cloning is not easy.

The sensitive nature of the science and the extreme ethical views of
some have made cloning, like genetic engineering, a highly controversial
technology.
While Scotland, once home to Dolly the sheep, may once have been the
heart of cloning science, it's now clear that the centre of activity has
moved to Texas where a combination of academic and commercial laboratories
are providing a service for a growing number of clients.

ViaGen, a commercial cloning company in Austin, Texas, is now charging
$15,000 (?7,500) to clone a bull and $3,000 (?1,500) for a pig.

Its customers are the owners of elite breeding stock - not animals for
slaughter - and the company believes it has now improved the cloning
technology to a point that makes it commercially viable for agricultural
animals.

Blake Russell, vice president of sales and business development at the
company, said: "The technology is currently in a rapid state of development
and will meet the needs of large agricultural numbers around the world very,
very soon."

Another commercial use of cloning being pioneered at Texas A and M
University is cloning endangered and domestic animals.

They created the first cloned domestic cat, Copy Cat or CC, and the
first successful cloning of a white-tailed deer.

Ahead of the game

The actual cloning process involves taking the nuclear genetic
material out of a skin cell of the animal you wish to clone, implanting it
into an egg that has had its own genetic material removed and using an
electrical impulse to start the development of a whole new genetically
identical embryo.

But in the same way that genetic engineering was a technology ahead of
its regulatory framework, the same is true of cloning.

The omission of cloned livestock from the food chain is voluntary, and
almost definitely not being observed by everyone.

In the US, the FDA has carried out a protracted risk assessment with a
public consultation to decide whether or not products from cloned animals or
from the progeny of cloned animals should enter the human food chain.

They will make their decision by the end of the year. But most cloning
organisations and livestock breeders are confident their decision will give
the go ahead for unlabelled cloned food products to fill US supermarket
shelves.

Charles Long, creator of CC from Texas A & M University, says: "There
is nothing different about clones than there is any animal which is out
there in the regular population.

"Therefore the FDA can really only come to one decision, which is to
allow cloned animals to go into the food chain without labelling."

Case-by-case

The situation in the UK and Europe is less clear. Clones or products
from clones are classed as novel foods, alongside genetically modified
organisms, with each example being looked at on a case-by-case basis.

Not that there are many examples - yet.

The one case that hit the headlines in the UK last year was that of a
young heifer, Dundee Paradise, who is the daughter of a cloned dairy bull.

A debate raged as to whether her milk should be allowed to enter the
normal supply chain.

She's still a little way off producing milk, and the Food Standards
Agency is currently in discussions with the EC and hopes to have definitive
regulations and rules on clones very soon.

It looks like Europe and the UK will not follow the example of the US,
Brazil and China, who are forging ahead with cloning animals for the
commercial market, but will continue to class clones and the products from
the offspring of cloned animals as novel foods.
[www.truthabouttrade.org]



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