Clone telomeres behave normally

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Researchers at Hannover Medical School have discovered a telomerase-dependent mechanism that resets telomere length during the transition from morula to blastocyst stages in embryonic development. This finding suggests that cloned embryos maintain normal telomere lengths, alleviating concerns about premature aging associated with cloning. Historically, the telomere lengths of cloned animals, such as Dolly the sheep, raised alarms due to their shortened telomeres compared to age-matched controls. However, subsequent studies on cloned cattle and mice indicated that their telomeres were of normal length. This new research contributes to the understanding of telomere biology and its implications for cloning and aging.
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Early embryo telomerase-dependent length resetting means clones won't have short telomeres | By Cathy Holding

A team of researchers at Hannover Medical School, Germany, has found a telomerase-dependent telomere length–resetting event between the morula and blastocyst embryonic stages that they say keeps cloned embryo telomere length normal.

Because telomeres—the structures located at the end of chromosomes—lose a piece of their sequences with each cell division, short telomeres are usually correlated with age, said Heiner Niemann, professor and head of the Department of Biotechnology at the Institut für Tierzucht, Neustadt, Germany, who coauthored the study, published in the May 17 PNAS Early Edition, with Sonja Schaetzlein and colleagues.

Scientists had earlier looked at telomere lengths in cloned animals because there was some concern that such animals may exhibit premature aging. “There was quite an uproar with Dolly [the first sheep clone] in that when they measured telomere length, they were indeed obviously shortened compared to age-matched controls,” Niemann said. However, later studies in cloned cattle and mice showed telomeres to be of normal length, he said.

http://www.biomedcentral.com/news/20040518/01
 
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Yeah, I thought so. Telomeres also have nothing to do with Progeria, as once thought.
 
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