Humans
May Be Easier To Clone
Than Sheep And Mice Because
Of A Single Genetic Difference
DURHAM,
N.C. -- Humans could be technically easier to clone than sheep,
cows, pigs and mice because humans possess a genetic benefit that
prevents fetal overgrowth, a major obstacle encountered in cloning
animals, according to new research by Duke University Medical
Center scientists.
The
genetic benefit seems subtle, say the researchers, but it is so
important that it creates fundamental differences between humans
and other animals in the way they regulate fetal growth and cancer
susceptibility. The research is published in the Aug. 15, 2001
issue of Human Molecular Genetics.
The
genetic benefit they found was this: humans and other primates
possess two activated copies of a gene called insulin-like growth
factor II receptor (IGF2R). Offspring receive one functional copy
from each parent, as expected. However, sheep, pigs, mice and
virtually all non-primate mammals receive only one functional
copy of this gene because of a rare phenomenon known as genomic
imprinting, in which the gene is literally stamped with markings
that turn off its function.
With
the second copy of the gene permanently imprinted, such animals
are more prone to two major problems -- developing cancer and
suffering from cloning complications like overly large offspring,
immature lung development, enlarged hearts and reduced immunity
to disease, say the scientists.
"This
is the first concrete genetic data showing that the cloning process
could be less complicated in humans than in sheep," said
Keith Killian, a Duke University Medical Center molecular evolutionist
and first author of the study. "Only one in 300 sheep embryos
takes hold, and up to half of these embryos have large offspring
syndrome, which can kill the mother and the fetus. Since humans
are not imprinted at IGF2R, then fetal overgrowth would not be
predicted to occur if humans were cloned."
The
problems associated with cloning an imprinted animal occur when
scientists manipulate the fledgling embryos in the laboratory,
the Duke researchers said. While the IGF2R gene remains intact,
the "epigenetic" markings -- crucial information layered
on top of the gene sequence --are inadvertently damaged and alter
the way the gene functions, said Randy Jirtle, professor of radiation
oncology at Duke.
Jirtle
compares the IGF2R gene to computer hardware that is functioning
properly, and its epigenetic markings to computer software that
is damaged or defective. The computer will not run if the software
does not work.
Jirtle
said humans are not subject to these epigenetic alterations because,
according to their research, humans are not imprinted at IGF2R.
For reasons unknown, he says, the very state of being imprinted
appears to make imprinted animals more susceptible to epigenetic
damage.
However,
many scientists have believed that up to 50 percent of people
are imprinted at the IGF2R gene and are more susceptible to cancer
and, potentially, cloning complications. But the Duke scientists,
using the latest gene mapping technology, found no evidence that
any humans possess an imprinted IGF2R. Also, decades of successfully
manipulating human embryos through in vitro fertilization have
not resulted in large offspring syndrome.
While
it is true that the IGF2R gene is frequently mutated in human
breast, colon, head and neck, liver and lung cancers, the researchers
said that is not because humans are imprinted at IGF2R. The gene,
like any other involved in cancer, simply becomes mutated, or
defective, for a variety of reasons unrelated to imprinting. Mutating
two copies of the IGF2R gene is much more difficult and statistically
unlikely than mutating a single copy, which is why mice and other
imprinted animals are far more susceptible to cancer than are
humans, said Jirtle.
Because
mice and rats comprise 90 percent of the animals used in research,
scientists should take into account the rodents' genetic susceptibility
to cancer when they are applying their study conclusions to humans,
said Killian. Clinical development of hundreds of potential disease-treating
drugs have been abandoned after rodent studies have shown them
to be potential carcinogens -- studies that might have had a different
outcome if rodents possessed two functional copies of IGF2R. "You
could theoretically give new life to thousands of discarded compounds
by retesting them in animals that, like humans, have both functional
copies of IGF2R," said Killian.
To
test for the presence of imprinting in humans and other mammals,
the Duke team used six different single nucleotide polymorphisms,
distinctive genetic markers called "SNIPs." Scientists
worldwide are now using SNIPs to map the entire human genome because
the older method, variable number tandem repeat (VNTR), frequently
produces ambiguous results.
"VNTRs
are antiquated and error prone because the enzymes used to amplify
the DNA jump backward and forward," said Killian. "When
you go to analyze the results, the picture you get is smeared
and therefore ambiguous."
The
Duke team's results definitively showed that human IGF2R is not
imprinted. The gene is also not imprinted in primates or our closest
non-primate relatives, including tree shrews and lemurs. In fact,
the team's evolutionary research shows that all these mammals
lost imprinting of the IGF2R gene approximately 70 million years
ago. The modern-day absence of imprinting in all primates and
their closest relatives bolsters the team's genetic data showing
that no humans are imprinted at IGF2R, said Jirtle. "While
there are approximately 45 imprinted genes identified in mammals,
IGF2R is the only gene known to have gained imprinting at one
point and later lost it during primate evolution," said Jirtle.
In
contrast, IGF2R is still imprinted in all other placental mammals
and marsupials included in their study -- including opossums,
mice, rats, sheep, cows and pigs. The divergence of imprinting
among various classes of mammals millions of years ago suggests
that they embarked on separate evolutionary paths that gave rise
to the unique genetic traits they possess today.
"Knowing
where on the evolutionary scale IGF2R imprinting appeared and
subsequently vanished will enable scientists to select animal
models better suited for making accurate inferences about human
clonability and cancer susceptibility," said Jirtle. "If
you don't know how animals are related to each other, there is
no way to accurately extrapolate the experimental results from
one species to another."
The
study was funded by grants from the National Institutes of Health,
Department of Defense and Sumitomo Chemical Co. Ltd. Other researchers
on the paper include Catherine M. Nolan of the department of zoology
at University College Dublin, Dublin, Ireland; Andrew A. Wylie
of the department of radiation oncology at Duke University Medical
Center; and Tao Li, Thanh H. Vu and Andrew R. Hoffman of the Veterans
Affairs Palo Alto Health Care System and department of medicine
at Stanford University School of Medicine, Palo Alto, Calififornia.
Source:
http://www.mc.duke.edu
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