Dolly The Sheep Is Alive, Alive, Alive, Alive!

In 1996, Dolly the sheep made headlines for being the first mammal cloned from an adult cell. She was put down in 2002. But as it turns out, Dolly’s still alive today. A scientist secretly made four copies years ago.

Sometime around 2006, Professor Keith Campbell of Nottingham University defrosted the mammary gland tissue used to make the original Dolly and cloned himself four perfect replicas. The Dollies’ existence had been kept relatively quiet until Campbell mentioned them in a recent lecture on animal cloning and welfare at the European Parliament. Serious animal cloning bahhhhhmbshell.

“Dolly is alive and well,” said Campbell, who keeps the sheep as pets on Nottingham’s campus. “Genetically these are Dolly.”

In fact, they may be better than Dolly. The original clone suffered from lung disease and arthritis and had to be put down at age six. The new Dollies, all roughly four years old, have had no health problems to speak of and show no signs that they’ll develop the arthritis that plagued their genetically identical predecessor. The cloning process was easier this time around, too; O.G. Dolly was the only survivor out of 277 eggs, while each of the new Dollies came from a group of only five embryos. That’s progress! And in the interest of full disclosure, I guess now’s a good time to mention that I have raised an entire army of Dolly clones with which I intend to annex Manhattan. Sheep Meadow, here I come. [Daily Mail]

Discuss

(9 Comments)
  • [–]

    James Mac

    Thursday, December 2, 2010 at 11:40 AM

    Was there mention of why the health has improved over Dolly 1, or how they went from one in 277 to one in 5?

    • [–]

      Blaghman

      Thursday, December 2, 2010 at 5:19 PM

      I’m not totally sure on this, so don’t necessarily take what I say as truth, but-

      Typically, sheep live for about 10-12 years, although, like many animals, there are well recorded exceptions, going, reasonably frequently, up to 20 years of age. Dolly, was brought up in a laboratory environment, and was treated as more of a pet than livestock, so this quite possibly had an adverse reaction on her health. In a lot of ways, Dolly was treated like a dog, taught to do tricks, stuff like that.

      So yeah, it’s very possible that the only real difference is environmental factors.

      As to the second part, I can’t help you there. I choose magic as the appropriate answer.

  • [–]

    Redfire

    Thursday, December 2, 2010 at 12:03 PM

    Spooky photo

  • [–]

    Pete

    Thursday, December 2, 2010 at 1:17 PM

    wow… I can’t tell any of them apart. That image has to be have been photoshopped

  • [–]

    Graham

    Thursday, December 2, 2010 at 2:13 PM

    My god… they all look the same (as opposed to regular uncloned sheep which of course look completely different from one another).

  • [–]

    Hiroshi Dalpadado

    Friday, December 3, 2010 at 9:05 AM

    This is why we won’t clone humans, as someone somewhere will secretly clone you for whatever purpose and you really can’t trust anyone. Not that we’re upto the point of being able to clone humans but who knows ?

    This must be a big blow to the industry as this kind of action only promotes suspicion for the industry and severely hampers the trust placed in them.

  • [–]

    Capt. Obvious

    Saturday, December 4, 2010 at 3:39 PM

    Bah

  • [–]

    amy mccarthy

    Wednesday, December 8, 2010 at 6:53 AM

    Save us Jesus from ourselves we are destroying everything sacred you gave us Please forgive this terrible world we have become!!!!
    AMEN

  • [–]

    Gospa

    Wednesday, December 8, 2010 at 3:02 PM

    How sad that man is trying to be God, by “creating” life in an unnatural way. It is no wonder that toe world is in chaos, weatherwise and so many other ways. God help us !

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