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Zoo plans to bring rare animals back from the dead

Stem cells already produced from a dead monkey could be reprogrammed to become sperm and eggs
Not a father in sight.  Endangered drill monkeys could be the first to benefit from this kind of breeding program
Not a father in sight. Endangered drill monkeys could be the first to benefit from this kind of breeding program
(Image: Cyril Ruoso/Minden Pictures)

TAKE frozen cells from a dead animal, reprogram them to become sperm and eggs, then use these to bring endangered species back from the brink.

That’s the aim of a collaboration between the San Diego zoo and The Scripps Research Institute in La Jolla, California. At the in San Francisco last week, Inbar Friedrich Ben-Nun and of Scripps described how they have created induced pluripotent stem (iPS) cells from the frozen skin cells of a deceased , an .

The team’s long-term goal is to coax iPS cells into becoming sperm and eggs. They will be making iPS cells from tissue held by San Diego zoo’s Frozen Zoo project – which has samples from some 8400 individuals representing more than 800 species. The sperm and eggs could be used in IVF treatments to add genetic diversity to captive breeding programmes. “You could actually breed from animals that are dead,” says Loring.

“The long-term goal is to turn iPS cells into sperm and eggs, which can be used to breed rare animals”

To create the iPS cells, the team used viruses engineered to carry four human genes that can reprogram adult cells into an embryonic stem cell state. However, the trick failed to work with cells from the northern white rhinoceros. Loring says it may be necessary to use rhino versions of the genes.

Another problem is that the reprogramming genes can make the iPS cells cancerous, though other researchers have developed techniques to make iPS cells without leaving copies of the genes behind.

Topics: Genetics