expand icon
book Genetics: Analysis and Principles 5th Edition by Robert Brooker cover

Genetics: Analysis and Principles 5th Edition by Robert Brooker

Edition 5ISBN: 978-0073525341
book Genetics: Analysis and Principles 5th Edition by Robert Brooker cover

Genetics: Analysis and Principles 5th Edition by Robert Brooker

Edition 5ISBN: 978-0073525341
Exercise 28
Evidence (see P.G. Shiels, A.J. Kind, K.H. Campbell, et al. (1999) Analysis of telomere lengths in cloned sheep. Nature 399 , 316-317) suggests that Dolly may have been "genetically older" than her actual age would have suggested. As mammals age, the chromosomes in somatic cells tend to shorten from the telomeres.Therefore, older individuals have shorter chromosomes in their somatic cells than do younger ones. When researchers analyzed the chromosomes in the somatic cells of Dolly when she was about 3 years old, the lengths of her chromosomes were consistent with a sheep that was significantly older, say, 9-10 years old. (Note: As described in the chapter, the sheep that donated the somatic cell that produced Dolly was 6 years old, and her mammary cells had been grown in culture for several cell doublings before a mammary cell was fused with an oocyte.)
a. Suggest an explanation why Dolly's chromosomes seemed so old
b. Let's suppose that a female sheep (like Dolly), which was produced via reproductive cloning, was mated at age 11 to a normal male sheep and then gave birth to a lamb named Molly. When Molly was 8 years old, a sample of somatic cells was analyzed. How old would you expect Molly's chromosomes to appear, based on the phenomenon of telomere shortening Explain your answer
c. Discuss how the observation of chromosome shortening, which was observed in Dolly, might affect the popularity of reproductive cloning.
Explanation
Verified
like image
like image

As our control of cell technologies has ...

close menu
Genetics: Analysis and Principles 5th Edition by Robert Brooker
cross icon