Scientists re-cycling the dog for the first time in history, but here's what happened next.

An international team of researchers has re-coloned the dog for the first time in history, essentially to find out whether genetically identical animals will suffer the same fate. Scientists from the National University of Seoul, Michigan State University, and the University of Illinois had their letter for the monumentic requencing published in [...]
Scientists from the National University of Seoul, Michigan State University, and the University of Illinois had their letter for the monumental recompliance published in the science magazine “reports”.
The group said they doubled the animal's original clone to learn more about the stability of cloning animals and to find out if cloning animals speed up the aging process or cause unknown birth defects, reports “RT” Transmission Periscope.
In 2005, the original Tai dog, an Afghan male dog, became the first dog to ever be cloned.
Researchers at Seoul National University introduced Tai cells into the eggs of a female donor and then placed them in the womb of the female animal.
The result of this implant, Snuppy (the Afghan dog), lived in a seemingly normal and healthy life at the campus of Seoul National University until he died of cancer at the age of 10, as did the original Tai, at the age of 12.
When Snoupy was five years old, however, researchers again collected stem cells, this time from the clone and used them to implant 94 embryos at all, resulting in the birth of four recoloured cubs.
Four days after birth, one of the cubs died, which is not unusual, yet it was unusual that this puppy died from an unexplainable diarrhea period. The three cubs survived nine months and lived normal, healthy lives. The cloned dog clones are about seven years old.
Researchers are keen to learn more about the sustainability of cloned animals, which have grown ever since 2005 and has so far shown little evidence that clones are somewhat degraded by the process.
However, few are known for re-coloning, so researchers plan to monitor the trend for further knowledge.. /Periscopi/












