Endangered species set for ‘stem cell rescue’

September 05, 2011 06:24 pm | Updated September 30, 2016 08:48 pm IST - London

An one-horned rhinoceros, with her new born baby, is seen inside the Kaziranga National Park, in India. The recent stem cell research could make it possible to improve reproduction and genetic diversity for some endangered species, and possibly saving them from extinction. File Photo: Ritu Raj Konwar

An one-horned rhinoceros, with her new born baby, is seen inside the Kaziranga National Park, in India. The recent stem cell research could make it possible to improve reproduction and genetic diversity for some endangered species, and possibly saving them from extinction. File Photo: Ritu Raj Konwar

Scientists say they have produced the first stem cells from endangered species, a breakthrough that could make it possible to improve reproduction and genetic diversity for some species, and possibly saving them from extinction. About five years ago, Oliver Ryder, director of genetics at the San Diego Zoo and co-leader of the study and his team had already established the Frozen Zoo, a bank of skin cells and other materials from more than 800 species and wondered if the thousands of samples they had amassed might be used as starting points for the conservation of endangered species.

At the time, although researchers were working with stem cells from embryos, scientists had not yet developed techniques for reliably inducing normal adult cells to become stem cells. But the technology arrived soon after, and scientists now accomplish this feat, called induced pluripotency, by inserting genes in normal cells that spark the transformation.

While professor of developmental neurobiology at Scripps Research Jeanne Loring’s team met with Ryder in early 2008, they realized that these newly emerging techniques might be applied to endangered species.

Loring and her colleagues at the Scripps Research Institute then created stemcells from frozen skin cells of two such endangered species - the drill and the northern white rhinoceros.

"The best way to manage extinctions is to preserve species and their habitats, but that’s not working all the time,” said Oliver Ryder, director of genetics at the San Diego Zoo and co-leader of the study.

The rhinos are a perfect example, he said, because there are so few. "Stem cell technology provides some level of hope that they won’t have to become extinct even though they’ve been completely eliminated from their habitats. I think that if humankind wants to save this species, we’re going to have to develop new methodologies,” he added.

The study was recently published in the journal Nature Methods.

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