Updated Aug.4,2005 02:13 KST

Stem Cell Pioneer Clones Dog

World Reacts to News of First Cloned Dog
Cloned Dogs to Make Test Subjects for Stem Cell Cure
Korea's Snuppy Named Amazing Invention of the Year
Stem cell research pioneer Hwang Woo-suk is once again sending tremors through the scientific world by cloning the world��s first dog. ��A cloned puppy was born to a surrogate mother on April 24,�� the Seoul National University professor said Wednesday. ��The puppy is genetically identical to an Afghan hound which provided its somatic cell.��

The animal was made by a process known as somatic cell nuclear transfer (SCNT) by taking the nucleus from a dog��s egg and replacing it with the nucleus from a somatic cell obtained from a male Afghan hound.

The creature has been named Snuppy -- a compound of ��puppy�� and ��SNU�� -- and will be used in experiments to study cures for human diseases. Hwang��s team said since dogs are easily tamed and share many common ailments with man, they are particularly suitable for research.

Since Dolly the Sheep was cloned in 1996, some 10 mammals have been cloned through SCNT, including rats, pigs, and cats. Dogs have been difficult to clone since the ova of most mammals reach maturity within the ovaries and are ready for fertilization, but dogs ovulate immature ova that are difficult to use in cloning.
Cloned dog Snuppy and its surrogate mother

Hwang said he was able to obtain the right ova for cloning by pinpointing the precise place where they mature and the exact time. ��By cloning dogs, which has been considered the biggest hurdle in animal cloning, our team has accumulated the world��s best know-how in the field,�� he said.

The research appeared in the prestigious science journal Nature on Aug. 4, with Snuppy featured at the bottom of the cover.

However, the move is likely to fuel an ongoing debate about pet cloning which has been escalating since the world's first cat clone ��CC���� was born in the U.S. in 2002. In the U.S., a pet cloning industry has sprung up over pleas from cat lovers to clone their feline friends despite a cost of several ten of thousands of dollars. Encouraged by this, cloning firms have been eyeing dog cloning too, pouring massive investment into research.

But Hwang warned the research was being conducted for the purpose of curing diseases of both humans and dogs, not to replicate pets. Hwang��s team is to embark on another project, cloning the Korean wolf, which faces extinction.


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