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Friday, Nov. 29
The Indiana Daily Student

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Glow, little piglet: Chinese fluorescent sow passes on ‘green’ genes to offspring

Scientists may mutate pig genes to grow human organs

 China Flourescent Pig

BEIJING – A cloned pig whose genes were altered to make it glow fluorescent green has passed on the trait to its young, a development that could lead to the future breeding of pigs for human transplant organs, a Chinese university reported.\nThe glowing piglets’ birth proves transgenic pigs are fertile and able to pass on their engineered traits to their offspring, according to Liu Zhonghua, a professor overseeing the breeding program at Northeast Agricultural University.\n“Continued development of this technology can be applied to ... the production of special pigs for the production of human organs for transplant,” Liu said in a news release posted Tuesday on the university’s Web site.\nCalls to the university seeking comment Wednesday were not answered.\nThe piglets’ mother was one of three pigs born with the trait in December 2006 after pig embryos were injected with fluorescent green protein. Two of the 11 piglets glow fluorescent green from their snout, trotters and tongue under ultraviolet light, the university said.\nRobin Lovell-Badge, a genetics expert at Britain’s National Institute for Medical Research, said the technology “to genetically manipulate pigs in this way would be very valuable.”\nLovell-Badge had not seen the research from China’s cloned pigs and could not comment on its credibility. He said, however, that organs from genetically altered pigs would potentially solve some of the problems of rejected organs in transplant operations.\nHe said the presence of the green protein would allow genetically modified cells to be tracked if they were transplanted into a human. The fact that the pig’s offspring also appeared to have the green genes would indicate that the genetic modification had successfully penetrated every cell, Lovell-Badge added.\nBut he said much more research and further trials – both in animals and in humans – would be necessary before the benefits of the technology could be seen.\nOther genetically modified pigs have been created before, including by Scotland’s Roslin Institute, but few results have been published.\nTokyo’s Meiji University last year successfully cloned a transgenic pig that carries the genes for human diabetes, while South Korean scientists cloned cats that glow red when exposed to ultraviolet rays.\nAssociated Press Writer Maria Cheng in London contributed to this report.

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