Clone-ception Hits a Wall: Infinite Cloning Isn’t Feasible

Japanese researchers studying serial cloning in mice with the epigenetic modifier trichostatin A found that while many late-generation clones were healthy at birth, the lineage eventually hit a hard limit: by the 58th generation the clones survived for only a day. TSA boosted cloning success (about 5.4% at generation 51) compared with 1.6% without it, and over 1,200 clones were produced from a single donor. Each generation accumulated mutations (roughly 70 SNVs and 1.5 structural variants), and in some cases placental abnormalities were corrected in later offspring through sexual reproduction, suggesting that sexual reproduction helps purge deleterious mutations and that indefinite cloning remains biologically unfeasible for now.
- Scientists Tried to Clone Clones Forever. It Didn’t End Well Gizmodo
- Mouse study shows repeated cloning causes grave genetic mutations Reuters
- Limitations of serial cloning in mammals Nature
- 'Dead End': Radical 20-Year Study Reveals Genetic Cloning Hits a Limit ScienceAlert
- Mammals cannot be cloned infinitely, mice study discovers France 24
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