Thursday, March 15, 2012

Tortoiseshell cats show limits of cloning | The Conscious Cat

tortoiseshell cat coloring

Cloning pets is a relatively new, and very expensive, procedure. It not only raises ethical questions about whether pets should be cloned when there are thousands of adoptable pets in shelters and at risk of being killed, but the few pet owners who have had their pets cloned have come to realize that while the cloned pet may look like their favorite departed pet, his or her personality may be completely different from the original.

While I?won?t even try to understand the science and mechanics involved with?cloning,?I do have a basic understanding of genetics, and I really know tortoiseshell cats. Those of us who love?cats with this distinctive coloring also know that they?are very unique when it comes to their personalities, often known as ?tortitude.??And now scientists are finding that tortoiseshell cats also show the limits of cloning.

IO9, a?daily publication that covers science, science fiction, and the future, reported that tortoiseshell cats cannot be replicated, because part of their genes simply aren?t there anymore.

?Tortoiseshell cats are the result of two different genes teaming up. One gene will turn the cat red, a nice solid ginger. The other will make it a black cat. Each gene is inherited from one of the tortoiseshell?s parents. Each is on one of the tortie?s X chromosomes. The tortoiseshell look is produced because of a process called ?X-linked inactivation.? The cells of developing embryo of the tortoiseshell cat randomly shut off one of the X chromosomes. And there?s no general consensus among the cells about which one to switch off, so each cell simply picks one. This random shut-off is why tortoiseshells have an unpatterned mix of black and red hair over their bodies.

Cloning a tortoiseshell involves taking the DNA from one cell. Since each of the cells have only one active X chromosome, when a new tortoiseshell embryo is developing using the borrowed DNA, it only has one gene affecting its coloration.

Thus, a cloned tortoiseshell kitten will generally be either black or red. Even if someone were to nab a cell from a developing embryo before the X-linked inactivation happened, the new cloned kitten would also randomly inactivate its X chromosomes, leaving two cloned siblings that don?t have the exact same color pattern.?

The article concludes: ??Life is sometimes determined to be unique, in spite of our best efforts to make it predictable.? And I, for one, am glad that this is the case.

Read the full article on IO9. For a more detailed look at tortoiseshell genetics,?visit the Messybeast website.

Would you ever consider having a cat cloned?

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Source: http://consciouscat.net/2012/03/15/tortoiseshell-cats-show-limits-of-cloning/

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