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turn all convicted burglars flourescent & ruin their profession ?

Quoting Nic Marais <[log in to unmask]>:

> I'm thinking about the crime and security problem here in S Africa...
> 
> All I need is ultra violet 'black lights' all around the outside of the
> house and a few of these dogs ;-)
> 
> Nic 57/15
> 
> On Fri, Apr 24, 2009 at 12:50 PM, <[log in to unmask]> wrote:
> 
> > handy for walks after dark but are their "deposits" flourescent ? :)
> >
> > Quoting rayilynlee <[log in to unmask]>:
> >
> > > Fluorescent puppy is world's first transgenic dog
> > >   a.. 12:00 23 April 2009 by Ewen Callaway
> > >   b.. For similar stories, visit the GM Organisms and Genetics Topic
> > Guides
> > > A cloned beagle named Ruppy - short for Ruby Puppy - is the world's
> first
> > > transgenic dog. She and four other beagles all produce a fluorescent
> > protein
> > > that glows red under ultraviolet light.
> > >
> > > A team led by Byeong-Chun Lee of Seoul National University in South
> Korea
> > > created the dogs by cloning fibroblast cells that express a red
> > fluorescent
> > > gene produced by sea anemones.
> > >
> > > Lee and stem cell researcher Woo Suk Hwang were part of a team that
> > created
> > > the first cloned dog, Snuppy, in 2005. Much of Hwang's work on human
> > cells
> > > turned out to be fraudulent, but Snuppy was not, an investigation later
> > > concluded.
> > >
> > > This new proof-of-principle experiment should open the door for
> > transgenic
> > > dog models of human disease, says team member CheMyong Ko of the
> > University
> > > of Kentucky in Lexington. "The next step for us is to generate a true
> > disease
> > > model," he says.
> > >
> > > However, other researchers who study domestic dogs as stand-ins for
> human
> > > disease are less certain that transgenic dogs will become widespread in
> > > research.
> > >
> > > Dogs already serve as models for diseases such as narcolepsy, certain
> > cancers
> > > and blindness. And a dog genome sequence has made the animals an even
> > more
> > > useful model by quickening the search for disease-causing genes. Most
> dog
> > > genetics researchers limit their work to gene scans of DNA collected
> from
> > > hundreds of pet owners.
> > >
> > > Making a glowing dog
> > > Lee's team created Ruppy by first infecting dog fibroblast cells with a
> > virus
> > > that inserted the fluorescent gene into a cell's nucleus. They then
> > > transferred the fibroblast's nucleus to another dog's egg cell, with its
> > > nucleus removed. After a week dividing in a Petri dish, researchers
> > implanted
> > > the cloned embryo into a surrogate mother.
> > >
> > > Starting with 344 embryos implanted into 20 dogs, Lee's team ended up
> > with
> > > seven pregnancies. One fetus died about half way through term, while an
> > > 11-week-old puppy died of pneumonia after its mother accidentally bit
> its
> > > chest. Five dogs are alive, healthy and starting to spawn their own
> > > fluorescent puppies, Ko says.
> > >
> > > Besides the low efficiency of cloning - just 1.7 per cent of embryos
> came
> > to
> > > term - another challenge to creating transgenic dogs is controlling
> where
> > in
> > > the nuclear DNA a foreign gene lands. Lee's team used a retrovirus to
> > > transfer the fluorescent gene to dog fibroblast cells, but they could
> not
> > > control where the virus inserted the gene.
> > >
> > > This would seem to prevent researchers from making dog "knockouts"
> > lacking a
> > > specific gene or engineering dogs that produce mutant forms of a gene.
> > These
> > > knockout procedures are now commonly done in mice and rats, and three
> > > researchers earned a Nobel prize in 2007 for developing this method,
> > called
> > > "gene targeting".
> > >
> > > No bright future?
> > > Ko is working to adapt a procedure used so far in pigs, cows and other
> > > animals to target genes in cloned dogs. His lab hopes to knock out a
> > specific
> > > oestrogen receptor in dogs to understand the hormone's effects on
> > fertility.
> > >
> > > The long lifespan of dogs and their reproductive cycle could make them
> > more
> > > relevant to human fertility than mice, he says. "I think these dogs will
> > be a
> > > very useful model for our research."
> > >
> > > Greg Barsh, a geneticist at Stanford University who studies dogs as
> > models of
> > > human disease, says creating a transgenic dog is "an important
> > > accomplishment", showing that cloning and transgenesis can be applied to
> > a
> > > wide range of mammals.
> > >
> > > "I do not know of specific situations where the ability to produce
> > transgenic
> > > dogs represents an immediate experimental opportunity," Barsh adds. But
> > > transgenic dogs will give researchers another potential tool to
> > understand
> > > disease.
> > >
> > > However, Nathan Sutter, a geneticist specialising in dogs at Cornell
> > > University in Ithaca, New York, says "transgenesis is labourious,
> > expensive
> > > and slow".
> > >
> > > Add the expense of caring for laboratory-reared dogs and negative public
> > > perceptions and it could mean few researchers turn to transgenic dogs
> > like
> > > Ruppy, he says: "it's not on my horizon as a dog geneticist at all."
> > >
> > > Journal reference: genesis (DOI: 10.1002/dvg.20504)
> > >
> > > If you would like to reuse any content from New Scientist, either in
> > print or
> > > online, please contact the syndication department first for permission.
> > New
> > > Scientist does not own rights to photos, but there are a variety of
> > licensing
> > > options available for use of articles and graphics we own the copyright
> > to.
> > >
> > > Rayilyn Brown
> > > Director AZNPF
> > > Arizona Chapter National Parkinson Foundation
> > > [log in to unmask]
> > >
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