Re: Dolly and telomerase

From: Anders Sandberg (asa@nada.kth.se)
Date: Tue Oct 05 1999 - 03:03:02 MDT


Damien Broderick <d.broderick@english.unimelb.edu.au> writes:

> The most astounding fact I picked up in my conversations with Dr Jack Cohen
> (and then half lost, having no search facilities with me and not even a
> notebook, so what follows is garbled and unreliable) is that Dolly came
> from a batch of attempts in which Dr Wilmut tried to insert the telomerase
> gene into the clones. Amazingly, all those embryos which incorporated
> telomerase failed; Dolly's genome, however, proved *not* to have taken up
> the gene.

Interesting. Telomerase might likely be important for development;
maybe the failed embryos didn't have the right programmed cell death
for correct morphogenesis (but isn't that mainly apoptosis rather than
senescence?).

Scientifically speaking, it is of course not a good idea to combine
two experiments into one (lots of confounding factors), but this
sounds intriguing. What about telomerase-enriched mice? I haven't
heard anything about them, maybe they don't exist yet, or can't exist?

> Anyway, this is all rather startling if correct. Might put a crimp in our
> plans for Immortality Next Week.

We can postpone it to Halloween, seems more fitting :-)

-- 
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
Anders Sandberg                                      Towards Ascension!
asa@nada.kth.se                            http://www.nada.kth.se/~asa/
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