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Dolly

Dolly fue la primera oveja clonada, marcando un hito en la ingeniería genética y la biotecnología.

Dolly the sheep was the first mammal to be successfully cloned from an adult somatic cell, a significant breakthrough in the field of genetics and biotechnology. She was born on July 5, 1996, at the Roslin Institute in Scotland, and her creation involved a technique known as somatic cell nuclear transfer (SCNT). In SCNT, the nucleus of an egg cell is removed and replaced with the nucleus from a somatic cell (a non-reproductive cell) of the organism to be cloned.

Dolly’s genetic makeup was identical to that of the sheep from which the somatic cell was taken, demonstrating that a fully differentiated cell could revert to a totipotent state capable of developing into a whole organism. This challenged the long-held belief that once a cell differentiated into a specific type, it could not revert to a more primitive state.

Su nacimiento planteó preguntas éticas y científicas relacionadas con cloning, the potential for cloning other animals, and implications for human cloning. Dolly lived for six years and was euthanized in 2003 due to a progressive lung disease. Despite the controversies, her creation paved the way for advancements in regenerative medicine, genetic research, and the conservation la conservación de especies en peligro mediante tecnología de clonación.

En resumen, Dolly no solo representa un logro histórico en la clonación, sino que también sirve como un caso de estudio fundamental para entender las complejidades y consideraciones éticas que rodean la manipulación genética y la biotecnología.

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