The Prague Post - Freeze-dried mice: how a new technique could help conservation

EUR -
AED 4.292015
AFN 73.614204
ALL 95.349144
AMD 434.477644
ANG 2.09145
AOA 1072.668337
ARS 1628.102336
AUD 1.638138
AWG 2.104731
AZN 1.987608
BAM 1.956417
BBD 2.353652
BDT 143.385214
BGN 1.94915
BHD 0.441494
BIF 3464.553462
BMD 1.168483
BND 1.492571
BOB 8.075581
BRL 5.878176
BSD 1.168573
BTN 109.887121
BWP 15.794981
BYN 3.29964
BYR 22902.275838
BZD 2.350351
CAD 1.60136
CDF 2702.702572
CHF 0.918073
CLF 0.026572
CLP 1045.79242
CNY 7.976656
CNH 7.986561
COP 4167.36121
CRC 532.070056
CUC 1.168483
CUP 30.964812
CVE 110.480686
CZK 24.366342
DJF 207.662266
DKK 7.47292
DOP 69.712108
DZD 155.010378
EGP 61.51479
ERN 17.527252
ETB 182.988915
FJD 2.591576
FKP 0.865299
GBP 0.867453
GEL 3.137409
GGP 0.865299
GHS 12.958476
GIP 0.865299
GMD 85.881986
GNF 10253.442414
GTQ 8.933817
GYD 244.509194
HKD 9.152439
HNL 31.105664
HRK 7.532396
HTG 153.088274
HUF 366.845767
IDR 20257.997765
ILS 3.489565
IMP 0.865299
INR 110.005181
IQD 1530.713334
IRR 1540119.625667
ISK 143.770338
JEP 0.865299
JMD 184.478172
JOD 0.828485
JPY 186.532002
KES 151.096639
KGS 102.143335
KHR 4685.618377
KMF 493.100323
KPW 1051.576714
KRW 1731.633598
KWD 0.359612
KYD 0.973907
KZT 542.883512
LAK 25624.842509
LBP 104637.693932
LKR 370.626871
LRD 215.322281
LSL 19.455608
LTL 3.450228
LVL 0.706804
LYD 7.419252
MAD 10.819864
MDL 20.275393
MGA 4843.364179
MKD 61.657583
MMK 2453.536033
MNT 4182.115599
MOP 9.428213
MRU 46.750855
MUR 54.626638
MVR 18.064369
MWK 2029.655735
MXN 20.362462
MYR 4.631287
MZN 74.665256
NAD 19.455622
NGN 1579.918263
NIO 42.895223
NOK 10.918079
NPR 175.818441
NZD 1.994274
OMR 0.449527
PAB 1.168573
PEN 4.049916
PGK 4.980953
PHP 71.036818
PKR 325.773764
PLN 4.243161
PYG 7399.333252
QAR 4.259708
RON 5.090966
RSD 117.418559
RUB 88.697145
RWF 1707.154337
SAR 4.382694
SBD 9.404636
SCR 16.577241
SDG 701.676726
SEK 10.821261
SGD 1.493309
SHP 0.872391
SLE 28.735601
SLL 24502.509458
SOS 667.790131
SRD 43.700116
STD 24185.248486
STN 24.766007
SVC 10.225224
SYP 129.272178
SZL 19.455172
THB 37.951868
TJS 10.984911
TMT 4.095535
TND 3.368157
TOP 2.813428
TRY 52.54281
TTD 7.922532
TWD 36.87719
TZS 3038.057213
UAH 51.335688
UGX 4347.370868
USD 1.168483
UYU 46.214573
UZS 14080.225335
VES 564.066374
VND 30762.66408
VUV 137.918996
WST 3.184584
XAF 656.16391
XAG 0.015491
XAU 0.000249
XCD 3.157885
XCG 2.106173
XDR 0.813967
XOF 653.182102
XPF 119.331742
YER 278.82935
ZAR 19.443624
ZMK 10517.753954
ZMW 21.881994
ZWL 376.251198
  • RBGPF

    -4.0600

    64.94

    -6.25%

  • RYCEF

    0.4400

    15.54

    +2.83%

  • BTI

    1.1100

    57.28

    +1.94%

  • RIO

    -1.4300

    98.85

    -1.45%

  • CMSC

    0.0800

    22.91

    +0.35%

  • NGG

    1.3600

    86.96

    +1.56%

  • BCE

    0.3700

    24.1

    +1.54%

  • GSK

    -0.0700

    55.63

    -0.13%

  • BP

    -0.0200

    46.35

    -0.04%

  • VOD

    0.3100

    15.62

    +1.98%

  • BCC

    1.5800

    83.82

    +1.88%

  • RELX

    -0.1400

    36.13

    -0.39%

  • CMSD

    0.1000

    23.23

    +0.43%

  • JRI

    -0.1200

    12.88

    -0.93%

  • AZN

    -2.5100

    192.3

    -1.31%

Freeze-dried mice: how a new technique could help conservation
Freeze-dried mice: how a new technique could help conservation / Photo: Teruhiko Wakayama - University of Yamanashi/AFP/File

Freeze-dried mice: how a new technique could help conservation

Japanese scientists have successfully produced cloned mice using freeze-dried cells in a technique they believe could one day help conserve species and overcome challenges with current biobanking methods.

Text size:

The United Nations has warned that extinctions are accelerating worldwide and at least a million species could disappear because of human-induced impacts like climate change.

Facilities have sprung up globally to preserve samples from endangered species with the goal of preventing their extinction by future cloning.

These samples are generally cryopreserved using liquid nitrogen or kept at extremely low temperatures, which can be costly and vulnerable to power outages.

They also usually involve sperm and egg cells, which can be difficult or impossible to harvest from old or infertile animals.

Scientists at Japan's University of Yamanashi wanted to see whether they could solve those problems by freeze-drying somatic cells -- any cell that isn't a sperm or egg cell -- and attempting to produce clones.

They experimented with two types of mice cells, and found that, while freeze-drying killed them and caused significant DNA damage, they could still produce cloned blastocysts -- a ball of cells that develops into an embryo.

From these, the scientists extracted stem cell lines that they used to create 75 cloned mice.

One of the mice survived a year and nine months, and the team also successfully mated female and male cloned mice with natural-born partners and produced normal pups.

The cloned mice produced fewer offspring than would have been expected from natural-born mice, and one of the stem cell lines developed from male cells produced only female mice clones.

"Improvement should not be difficult," said Teruhiko Wakayama, a professor at the University of Yamanashi's Faculty of Life and Environmental Sciences, who helped lead the study published in the journal Nature Communications this month.

"We believe that in the future we will be able to reduce abnormalities and increase the birth rate by searching for freeze-drying protectant agents and improving drying methods," he told AFP.

- 'Very exciting advance' -

There are some other drawbacks -- the success rate of cloning mice from cells stored in liquid nitrogen or at ultra-low temperatures is between two and five percent, while the freeze-dried method is just 0.02 percent.

But Wakayama says the technique is still in its early stages, comparing it to the study that produced "Dolly" the famous sheep clone -- a single success after more than 200 tries.

"We believe the most important thing is that cloned mice have been produced from freeze-dried somatic cells, and that we have achieved a breakthrough in this field," he said.

While the method is unlikely to entirely replace cryopreservation, it represents a "very exciting advance for scientists interested in biobanking threatened global biodiversity", said Simon Clulow, senior research fellow at the University of Canberra's Centre for Conservation Ecology and Genomics.

"It can be difficult and costly to work up cryopreservation protocols and so alternatives, especially those that are cheaper and robust, are extremely welcome," added Clulow, who was not involved in the research.

The study stored the freeze-dried cells at minus 30 degrees Celsius, but the team has previously showed freeze-dried mouse sperm can survive at least a year at room temperature and believes somatic cells would do too.

The technique could eventually "allow genetic resources from around the world to be stored cheaply and safely", Wakayama said.

The work is an extension of years of research on cloning and freeze-drying techniques by Wakayama and his partners.

One of their recent projects involved freeze-drying mouse sperm that was sent to the International Space Station. Even after six years in space the cells were successfully rehydrated back on Earth and produced healthy mice pups.

L.Bartos--TPP