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Scientists Sequence Half the Woolly Mammoth's Genome
Scientific American ^ | 11/19/08 | Kate Wong

Posted on 11/19/2008 11:01:29 AM PST by Abathar

Thousands of years after the last woolly mammoth lumbered across the tundra, scientists have sequenced a whopping 50 percent of the beast’s nuclear genome, they report in a new study. Earlier attempts to sequence the DNA of these icons of the Ice Age produced only tiny quantities of code. The new work marks the first time that so much of the genetic material of an extinct creature has been retrieved. Not only has the feat provided insight into the evolutionary history of mammoths, but it is a step toward realizing the science-fiction dream of being able to resurrect a long-gone animal.

Researchers led by Webb Miller and Stephan C. Schuster of Pennsylvania State University extracted the DNA from hair belonging to two Siberian woolly mammoths and ran it through a machine that conducts so-called highthroughput sequencing. Previously, the largest amount of DNA from an extinct species comprised around 13 million base pairs—not even 1 percent of the genome. Now, writing in the November 20 issue of Nature, the team reports having obtained more than three billion base pairs. “It’s a technical breakthrough,” says ancient-DNA expert Hendrik N. Poinar of McMaster University in Ontario.

Interpretation of the sequence is still nascent, but the results have already helped overturn a long-held assumption about the proboscidean past. Received wisdom holds that the woolly mammoth was the last of a line of species in which each one begat the next, with only one species existing at any given time. The nuclear DNA reveals that the two mammoths that yielded the DNA were quite different from each other, and they seem to belong to populations that diverged 1.5 million to two million years ago. This finding confirms the results of a recent study of the relatively short piece of DNA that resides in the cell’s energy-producing organelles—called mitochondrial DNA—which suggested that multiple species of woolly mammoth coexisted. “It looks like there was speciation that we were previously unable to detect” using fossils alone, Ross D. E. MacPhee of the American Museum of Natural History in New York City observes.

Thus far the mammoth genome exists only in bits and pieces: it has not yet been assembled. The researchers are awaiting completion of the genome of the African savanna elephant, a cousin of the woolly mammoth, which will serve as a road map for how to reconstruct the extinct animal’s genome.

Armed with complete genomes for the mammoth and its closest living relative, the Asian elephant, scientists may one day be able to bring the mammoth back from the beyond. “A year ago I would have said this was science fiction,” Schuster remarks. But as a result of this sequencing achievement, he now believes one could theoretically modify the DNA in the egg of an elephant to match that of its furry cousin by artificially introducing the appropriate substitutions to the genetic code. Based on initial comparisons of mammoth and elephant DNA, he estimates that around 400,000 changes would produce an animal that looks a lot like a mammoth; an exact replica would require several million.

(The recent cloning of frozen mice is not applicable to woolly mammoths, Schuster believes, because whereas mice are small and therefore freeze quickly, a mammoth carcass would take many days to ice over—a delay that would likely cause too much DNA degradation for cloning.)

In the nearer term, biologists are hoping to glean insights into such mysteries as how woolly mammoths were adapted to their frigid world and what factors led to their demise. Miller notes that by studying the genomes of multiple mammoths from different time periods, researchers will be able to chart the decrease in genetic diversity as the species died out. The downfall of the mammoths and other species may contain lessons for modern fauna in danger of disappearing, he says.

Indeed, the team is now sequencing DNA they have obtained from a thylacine, an Australian marsupial that went extinct in 1936, possibly as a result of infection. They want to compare its DNA with that of the closely related Tasmanian devil, which is currently under threat from a devastating facial cancer.

“We’re hoping to learn why one species went extinct and the other didn’t and then use that [knowledge] in conservation efforts,” Miller says. If the research turns up genes associated with survival, scientists can use that information to develop a breeding program for the Tasmanian devil that maximizes the genetic diversity of the population—and increases the frequency of genes that confer immunity. Perhaps the greatest promise of ancient DNA is not raising the dead but preserving the living.


TOPICS: Chit/Chat; Outdoors; Pets/Animals; Science
KEYWORDS: dna; emptydna; godsgravesglyphs; mtdna
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How cool is that, someday our grandkids might actually be able to bowhunt these things again like our ancestors did.

They survived in a much different climate than elephants do, turn a few lose in Canada or Siberia where there is plenty of room and let them have a chance once more.

1 posted on 11/19/2008 11:01:30 AM PST by Abathar
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To: Abathar

Oh man!

I SO want to see a successfully cloned mammoth.


2 posted on 11/19/2008 11:03:46 AM PST by WayneS (Respect the 2nd Amendment; Repeal the 16th)
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To: Abathar

Congratulations! Mapping any genome is absolutely worthless science and contributes nothing...but, hey, nice work.


3 posted on 11/19/2008 11:06:09 AM PST by Deb (Beat him, strip him and bring him to my tent!)
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To: Abathar

It’s like “Jurassic Park” starting to become reality. Crichton was definitely a man ahead of his time.


4 posted on 11/19/2008 11:06:11 AM PST by jpl (Does anybody have seven hundred billion dollars I can borrow?)
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To: Abathar

“biologists are hoping to glean insights into such mysteries as how woolly mammoths were adapted to their frigid world”

gee...I’m willing to bet a thick coat of hair and layer of fat would have something to do with it.


5 posted on 11/19/2008 11:06:58 AM PST by PrairieRoot (Here's hoping Global Warning extends the hunting and logging seasons.)
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To: Deb

Mapping genomes has already given us much knowledge into what non genetic sequences are evolutionarily conserved between species, and biologists are finding out what regulatory roles these sequences have. We have also found several proteins more active in the human brain that in other primates, and the role of these proteins in human intelligence is being explored.

In other words, you have no idea what you are talking about.


6 posted on 11/19/2008 11:09:06 AM PST by allmendream (Wealth is EARNED not distributed.... so how could it be Redistributed?)
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To: allmendream

Blah, blah, blah...sez you.


7 posted on 11/19/2008 11:11:39 AM PST by Deb (Beat him, strip him and bring him to my tent!)
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To: Abathar

They probably taste good too.


8 posted on 11/19/2008 11:12:02 AM PST by OneWingedShark (Q: Why am I here? A: To do Justly, to love mercy, and to walk humbly with my God.)
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To: Abathar

[How cool is that, someday our grandkids might actually be able to bowhunt these things again like our ancestors did. ]

Given our likely rate of regression under the Obama regime, our grandkids may actually have to hunt like prehistoric Cro-Magnons to survive.


9 posted on 11/19/2008 11:12:32 AM PST by FastCoyote (I am intolerant of the intolerable.)
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To: Abathar

Mammoths were not an Arctic species. If somebody wants mammoths wandering protected around the temperate zone trampling corn crops that is what they will get if they keep this up. Buffalo in the barley is one thing, but mammoth in the maize will cost big.


10 posted on 11/19/2008 11:15:16 AM PST by RightWhale (Exxon Suxx)
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To: Deb

I see the intellectual content of your posts has gone up. It has gone from the negative zone into zero. Keep up the improvement and good work and someday you might actually contribute a post that is both correct and contains intellectual value.


11 posted on 11/19/2008 11:16:16 AM PST by allmendream (Wealth is EARNED not distributed.... so how could it be Redistributed?)
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To: allmendream
Yeah, that brain protein info was hugh. Be sure to let us know what comes of it. (tapping fingers waiting)
12 posted on 11/19/2008 11:20:10 AM PST by Deb (Beat him, strip him and bring him to my tent!)
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To: RightWhale
"Buffalo in the barley is one thing, but mammoth in the maize will cost big."

LOL - Hey, it will give the wolves something to chase after...

13 posted on 11/19/2008 11:21:07 AM PST by Abathar (Proudly posting without reading the article carefully since 2004)
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To: OneWingedShark

Ask some of the scientists who ate it a while back at a convention, they say it was delicious. Found one frozen, cut it up and they had woolly mammoth steaks one night.


14 posted on 11/19/2008 11:24:50 AM PST by Abathar (Proudly posting without reading the article carefully since 2004)
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To: Abathar
We're slipping ...... over a dozen posts and not one picture of Helen Thomas or Janet Reno yet?????

.

15 posted on 11/19/2008 11:27:46 AM PST by Elle Bee
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To: Deb
Oh, I am sure you are waiting for the data with baited breath.

Genomic data has been an invaluable aid in understanding the role of non-genetic regulatory elements and what, on a biological basis, sets humans apart from other primates.

Why do you wish that the world would ignorant of genomic data? Your claim that it is of no use is obviously an abysmal error. Are there many other scientific subjects the inquiry into you wish to curtail? Somehow I don't think it is the utility of the data that makes you oppose it.

16 posted on 11/19/2008 11:28:28 AM PST by allmendream (Wealth is EARNED not distributed.... so how could it be Redistributed?)
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To: Abathar

That’s a BS story. I heard variants of it in the past; simply not true.


17 posted on 11/19/2008 11:30:50 AM PST by stormer
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To: Elle Bee

SHHHH! Don’t give anyone ideas!


18 posted on 11/19/2008 11:31:07 AM PST by Abathar (Proudly posting without reading the article carefully since 2004)
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To: Elle Bee
We're slipping ...... over a dozen posts and not one picture of Helen Thomas or Janet Reno yet?????



My job is done here now...


19 posted on 11/19/2008 11:32:23 AM PST by aWolverine
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To: stormer

If it is then it has been around for a while. I remember hearing about it back in the early eighties, long before snopes was even imagined...


20 posted on 11/19/2008 11:34:31 AM PST by Abathar (Proudly posting without reading the article carefully since 2004)
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