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Sunday, 3 December, 2000, 10:22 GMT
Dolly team creates designer chicks
The scientists who produced Dolly the sheep clone are reported to have created designer chickens that can help produce drugs to fight cancer.
The Mail on Sunday newspaper says the researchers have altered the hens' genetic make-up so they lay eggs containing pharmacologically useful proteins.
The Roslin Institute scientists, the creators of Dolly, are to unveil one particular genetically modified chicken named Britney at Edinburgh Castle on Wednesday.
The Roslin team have been working on the chicken project with experts in the US.
'Pharming' future
Proteins in egg-white are produced according to instructions encoded in the hen's genes.
Altering the genetic material in a cell's nucleus can lead to a chicken that will lay eggs full of proteins that can be used in drug production. A chicken can lay as many as 250 eggs a year. This makes "pharming", as it is called, an attractive method for producing drug components.
Britney was developed over two years by US biotech company Viragen and the Roslin Institute. It is understood that proteins in her egg-white can be used in drugs to treat various illnesses including ovarian cancer and breast cancer.
A spokesman for Viragen has refused to comment in advance of the official announcement. No-one from the Roslin Institute was available for comment.
Related to this story:
Sheep clone goes on display
(17 Nov 00 | Sci/Tech)
Cloning gets specific
(29 Jun 00 | Sci/Tech)
Listen to public, says Dolly scientist
(30 May 00 | Sci/Tech)
Scientists produce five pig clones
(14 Mar 00 | Sci/Tech)
From pig clone to human transplant
(14 Mar 00 | Sci/Tech)
Internet links:
GeneWatch |
Roslin Institute |
Royal Society of Medicine |
PPL Therapeutics |
Human Fertilisation and Embryology Authority |
The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites
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