The aim of this study was to clone native Anatolian Grey cattle by using different donor cell types, such as fibroblast, cartilage and granulosa cells cryopreserved in a gene bank and oocytes aspirated from ovaries of Holstein cows as the recipient cytoplasm source. One male calf from fibroblast, three female calves from granulosa cells and one female calf from cartilage cells were born healthy and at normal birthweights. No calves were lost after birth. The results demonstrated that the cloned calves had the same microsatellite alleles at 11 loci as their nuclear donors. However, the mtDNAs of the five Anatolian Grey cloned calves had different haplotypes from their donor cells and mtDNA heteroplasmy could not be detected in any of the clo...
Studies were conducted to explore the possibility of employing dromedary camel (Camelus dromedarius)...
Cloning by nuclear transfer using mammalian somatic cells has enormous potential application. Howeve...
Many local breeds are currently at risk because of replacement by a limited number of specialized co...
The aim of this study was to clone native Anatolian Grey cattle by using different donor cell types,...
Despite the tremendous advancement in somatic cell nuclear transfer (SCNT) in camels, the generation...
Approximately 100 species become extinct a day. Despite increasing interest in using cloning to resc...
The development of somatic nuclear transfer procedures and the factors that are likely to affect the...
An efficient system for genetic modification and large scale cloning of cattle is of importance for ...
Cloning by cell transfer offers an efficient method for increasing genetic gain in livestock populat...
The primary intention of somatic cell nuclear transfer in cattle is commercially driven, notably to ...
Somatic cells were isolated from cryopreserved semen of 4 buffalo bulls, 3 of which had died over 10...
Somatic cell nuclear transfer (SCNT) provides a unique opportunity to reproduce animals with superio...
Recent evolutions of somatic cloning by nuclear transfer are reported, especially in the bovine spec...
Cloned sheep, cattle, goats, pigs and mice have now been produced using somatic cells for nuclear tr...
In the last few decades, farm animal genetic diversity has rapidly declined. Therefore, it is in the...
Studies were conducted to explore the possibility of employing dromedary camel (Camelus dromedarius)...
Cloning by nuclear transfer using mammalian somatic cells has enormous potential application. Howeve...
Many local breeds are currently at risk because of replacement by a limited number of specialized co...
The aim of this study was to clone native Anatolian Grey cattle by using different donor cell types,...
Despite the tremendous advancement in somatic cell nuclear transfer (SCNT) in camels, the generation...
Approximately 100 species become extinct a day. Despite increasing interest in using cloning to resc...
The development of somatic nuclear transfer procedures and the factors that are likely to affect the...
An efficient system for genetic modification and large scale cloning of cattle is of importance for ...
Cloning by cell transfer offers an efficient method for increasing genetic gain in livestock populat...
The primary intention of somatic cell nuclear transfer in cattle is commercially driven, notably to ...
Somatic cells were isolated from cryopreserved semen of 4 buffalo bulls, 3 of which had died over 10...
Somatic cell nuclear transfer (SCNT) provides a unique opportunity to reproduce animals with superio...
Recent evolutions of somatic cloning by nuclear transfer are reported, especially in the bovine spec...
Cloned sheep, cattle, goats, pigs and mice have now been produced using somatic cells for nuclear tr...
In the last few decades, farm animal genetic diversity has rapidly declined. Therefore, it is in the...
Studies were conducted to explore the possibility of employing dromedary camel (Camelus dromedarius)...
Cloning by nuclear transfer using mammalian somatic cells has enormous potential application. Howeve...
Many local breeds are currently at risk because of replacement by a limited number of specialized co...