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Cloned cats that glow?!

Posted: Thursday, December 13, 2007 2:35 PM by Alan Boyle


AFP / Getty Images

CLICK FOR VIDEO: Photos from South Korea's Ministry of Science and Technology
show cats with a gene for producing red fluorescence protein. The cats appear
normal in visible light, at left, but their skin glows red under ultraviolet light, at
right. Click here or on the image to watch the video from NBC's TODAY show.


South Korean scientists say they have cloned cats whose genes have been altered so that they glow in the dark - taking advantage of a technological twist that could someday be used to make more dramatic genetic changes in all sorts of creatures.

A research team at Gyeongsang National University, headed by Kong Il-Keun, produced several kitty clones in January and February, the government-managed Korea.net news service reported Wednesday. This week the scientists showed off the cats, which now weigh about 7 pounds (3 to 3.5 kilograms) and glow a dull red under ultraviolet light.

"The ability to manipulate the fluorescent protein and use this to clone cats opens new horizons for artificially creating animals with human illnesses linked to genetic causes," the Ministry of Science and Technology said in Wednesday's report.

The procedure for cloning a cat has been around for six years, and Kong himself first performed that particular feat back in 2004. What's noteworthy about the newly reported twist - other than that glow-in-the-dark kitties are really cool - is that scientists fiddled with the donor cat's genetic code, then passed those changes on to the clones.

Here's what the researchers say they did: They took skin cells from Turkish Angora female cats and used a virus to insert the genetic instructions for making red fluorescent protein. Then they put the gene-altered nuclei into eggs for cloning. The cloned embryos were implanted back into the donor cats, which effectively became the surrogate mothers for their own clones.

Four kittens were born by Caesarian section, but one of them died during the procedure, according to the Korea Times. The fact that the kittens' skin cells glowed under ultraviolet light served as evidence that they were really gene-altered clones.

Assuming that the results are confirmed, Kong's cats would join mice and pigs in the glow-in-the-dark clone menagerie. The implication is that if you can pass along the easy-to-recognize coding for fluorescent markers through cloning, you could eventually pass along more complex genetic coding.

Theoretically, you could add in the coding for an endangered species, producing cloned hybrids to boost the gene pool for Sumatran tigers, Iberian lynxes and the like. You might even stick in the coding to give other creatures human diseases, so that they can be studied without raising the level of ethical concern that comes with human experimentation. (I realize that there's a different set of ethical concerns about such trangenic experiments, however.)

Most provocatively, animal clones might be genetically altered to produce human body parts. Does that sound like a way-out science-fiction plot? Well, it's already happening, and sparking an unsettling debate.

This week's report doesn't mean that glow-in-the-dark pets will be waiting under the Christmas tree anytime soon. There are a few caveats surrounding these cats:

  • This research came to light through press releases rather than peer-reviewed articles, and many of the details still have to be published and replicated. It doesn't help that South Korea was ground zero for the biggest scientific scandal in cloning just a couple of years ago. You'll want to wait for confirmation before you put too much stock in Kong's glowing reports.

  • Even if the results are confirmed, they represent just one more small step in the long march of genetic progress. Those cool fluorescent proteins merely serve as a guide for more substantive genetic modifications.

  • Even if glow-in-the-dark cats become routine in the laboratory, that doesn't mean they'll hit it off as housepets. Glow-in-the-dark fish have been offered commercially for several years - but they're still illegal in California and many countries, due to concerns about genetically modified organisms. What's more, it costs tens of thousands of dollars to produce just one run-of-the-mill, non-glowing cat clone - a price tag so hefty that it's not commercially viable.

To my mind, the best place to look for a cute little ball of glowing fur is your local pet adoption center - plus an outlet that sells glow-in-the-dark cat collars. What do you think? As always, feel free to weigh in with your comments below.

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Comments

that's some seriously freaky stuff, eh?
Day Glo Korean Pussycats...I hear the sound of teen spirit...
What a name for a prepubescent girl band...don'tcha think?
This is so cool. Kudos to the Koreans and their pursuits.
Do Glow in the dark cats have glow in the dark offspring?  

It can't be a survival advantage.  Probably is murder on night vision.
   I'm not ready to fall for this.  Too much of this type of thing is reported and sucked in readily by the public and never verified, do not be fooled so easily. Scientific method requires repeated and verifiable results.
I wonder how many of these experiments wound up in the garbage, or wound up a mutilated mess. Animal rights, anyone?
How about we color code the endanger specieces this way is easy to tell which one are on the list. We can use different colors to tell how endangered they are.  
This is a bit too close to the "mad scientist"stuff of science fiction...scary...and I feel so sorry for the animals! Yes..I'm a "no animal testing" bleeding heart animal lover. Adopt a stray today.
John Doe, good question re whether glow-in-the-dark cats would have similar offspring. Genetically-altered cats that are hypoallergenic (free of the protein that makes sensitive people wheeze) are, if I understand it, spayed and neutered before being sold to new owners. Their creators say that that's to ensure some quality control in their cats.
I imagine that Korean scientists might do the same, if they decided to have these cats sold as pets.
Thats so cool! how much do they cost?
so they can find them easier and eat them
WHY...its not even funny. Wasting there time on animals for what purpose. Does this experiment let these animals live longer? Does it help society? NO NO and NO...
What is the possible point of this? How terrible the human race is to think we should fool with mother nature for our own benefit! I wonder what the potential fall out of this will be.
Um. If I remember correctly I don't think anything that's a mammel is suposed to glow! Am I right?
weak. someday all this fiddling with things we know little or nothing about is going to end up in a huge mess.
Did anybody watch Big Bang Theory? I wonder if gold fish night lights are that far off?
Can we do this in our own backyards?
Nice to mention that presently this is far too expensive to own personally. While the article touts the medical uses, I see marketing. The tech is available and price will surely drop with demand. So I would like to choose the color my cat will glow (BLUE) in and order early.  :)
Why can't people just leave some things well enough alone?
great-just what we need:GM mice that aren't afraid and cats that glow.bah!humbug!
If this is true, it's ridiculous. How about we next make babies that glow in the dark? How far does science have to go? I certainly hope the US has more sense than this.
Is it genetic research or were the kittens born too close to a nuclear power plant?
Its kinda cool but there are still problems with this because, i mean, say they use this info for cloning an endangered tiger with a genetic problem. all the next clones will have this problem also, no?

and i also feel sorry for these animals why create more if there are so many that are put down every day because they are not wanted. come on, think about that
These animals should have never been cloned in the first place. Next they will be killed in the name of science too.
I think this is totally sick and not at all necessary. I don't understand why we can't leave gods creatures alone and let the world take the path it is supposed to take. I am not a religious finatic or anything but this just seems wrong.
Why would anyone want to do this??
WTF. What is this the next new trend? Is this something that will be going on the market? I can just see it, idiots in Hollywood will be buying them like hot cakes. Hmmm...what do you think, $10,000 a peice? ehh.
They aren't doing this to be cruel or to waste time.  As the article points out, this is an easily identifiable tangible result.  The point is, how would they know their genetic modification had worked unless they knew what they were trying to do and had a verifiable outcome.

Their eventual goal is to be able to clone useful things like organs, body parts, or animals that have genetic defects that they can test new medicines on. You have to start somewhere, you don't grow up running, you have to learn how first.
This doesn't seem healthy for the cats. PETA is so doing there next protest in Korea. ha ha
Cat's are freaky enough on their own, we don't need to tinker with their genes to make them anymore spooky. Don't get me wrong I love cats, just they have some funny habits and loveable spooky quirks inspite of their being loveable, I've been woken up by a pet cat sitting on my chest at night, If it were glowing, I don't know that would be too weird for me.
I wish there was a more humane way to test things. It's awful to imagine a beautiful soul thats born just to be experimented on and/or given sickness.. all for the greater good. imho, it's for the greater profit. maybe the animals will escape like in the movie secret of nimh.
If you have to ask why we would do this, you are too stupid for the answer. Even if you're so simplistic as to want to stop scientific research you need to understand that YOU CAN'T. It is as inevitable as mankind's need to explore. Thankfully we are a patriarchal society, otherwise all progress would have stopped centuries ago.  
I think that the only good thing about this is that the cat may not get hit by a car at night and killed.  The bad stuff could go on for pages - first off, they are they way they are for many reasons they have great night vision and with not "glowing" in the dark they are safe from harm's way.  There are millions of animals of ALL kinds killed every day by humans for there own self pride of somehow feeling of power by killing and making them suffer or by having to many that just cant find home so they are sent to a "better place".  I also think that our time could be spent on, say, finding a cure for cancer that we can use!  We have people dying also, lets put our brains to making it so the war is over and our families are not out there dying .  Theres a lot more this world could use other than cloning animals.  Even if i thought it was right, the animals NEVER COME OUT THE SAME.
They made a few that glow green too I heard... anybody else see that?
the point is not to make a cat that glows but to test if the altered gene is working correctly. if you alter a gene how do you know that it is working the way you want it to without harming the cat? the answer is to alter the gene in a way that will produce physical effect such as glowing. as to how this helps mankind, that's simple. glowing cats prove that the techniques to alter genes are working. once you have the ability to alter genes you can begin to work at correcting flaws in genes such as sicklecell which by the way is almost solved.
"someday all this fiddling with things we know little or nothing about is going to end up in a huge mess." -TJ.

I have to wonder if people that say things like this have ever used plastic, flown in an airplane, used a microwave, etc...  
Religion is great - but I thought most religions also advocated the seeking of knowledge, and helping yourself?
Daily prayers should be said for things done against what God created.
They clone animals as if just because they are a clone they will not have a personality of their own? i personally still think it murder to kill something without guilt just because you created it. also, if these animals are released in the wild as individual or endangered animals and they GLOW, would it not be easier for predators to get access to them? its okay to create something and use it for your benefit, but not if it takes harming and murder of the subject along with it!
Outside of how cool it looks, this is nothing new. I've reported on cloned glow-in-the-dark mice many times. When you inject glowing stem cells into diseases mice, you can see how the cells react and work in the body. These kinds of things actually do have merit.
for one i think cloning is absolutely stupid, God made each creature different for a purpose, and each of us and every creature on this earth is meant for only one life. I think cloning is sick and wrong and i think humans should stop trying to be God. And has anyone ever come to think, that there are a lot of things that are not supposed to be discovered and things we are not mean to know. things in life that should just stay secret or undiscovered.  
Thats so cool - maybe next we can have glow in the dark subway rats and roaches
I have to say this development is fascinating (if true).

Although this specific alteration may seem pointless, it just goes to show the success and progress in the scientific community. We can only hope that experiments that will have a direct benefit society are following close behind.
C'mon, guys.  Spending millions to make cloned glow-in-the-dark cats is MUCH more important than, say, ending world hunger or war.  

Bonus, we could mass-raise them on farms and make glow-in-the-dark fur coats.
I think this is the very beginning of a scientific phenomenon.  Just imagine, if the red protein can be transferred successfully, than why not human body parts?  If someone needed an ear or other ligament and there were no donors available, animals could help save lives.  (not by providing extra ears for people, but other body organs.)
Its a little odd if you ask me I mean cloning cats and everything, but it makes a great current event for my physical science class tomorrow. I just wish there hadn't been the whole death thing in the process, not that testing animals or using them for research in any way is right in the first place.
I do not see the point in all this. they are wasting their money on trying to alter what god has created, when the should be giving it to feed the world program so some people can be able to wake up in the morning to see the sun much less, instead of dying from hunger
Although it looks like just a cute trick it really could help us to find the answers to several genetic diseases. They are just using a visible way to demonstrate that you can move genes between species.  It's only messing with God's plan as much as any sort of breeding.  And we've been selectively breeding all sorts of species since before the written word.
I agree that this is sick.  Why doesn't that scientist inject his child with a glow in the dark gene?  It's just plain old stupid.  
I applaud Korea for their scientific advancements, but don't you think their are more critical problems in the world that you could be devoting your career as a scientist to besides making cats glow? Sometimes you need to take a step back and ask yourself whether you are working for the good of humanity or for your own amusement.
This is absolutely ridiculous. Aren't cats good enough even if they aren't glow-in-the-dark? They have amazing vision in the dark, they almost always land on their feet (if they fall from a certain height), and they're adorable to boot. What more does the world want out of nature?
(Think of the good those research funds could have done for some fellow humans, here and now.)  Anway, Nature is all about balance.  Yin and yang.  There will undoubtedly be repercussions.  Just as overbreeding purebred creatures leads to negative health and intelligence consequences, any time we try to manipulate nature, she counters our conceited ways.


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