Alison Van Eenennaam, Ph.D.



Similar documents
Proceedings, Applied Reproductive Strategies in Beef Cattle September 11 and 12, 2007, Billings, Montana NEW TECHNOLOGIES FOR REPRODUCTION IN CATTLE

Reproductive technologies. Lecture 15 Introduction to Breeding and Genetics GENE 251/351 School of Environment and Rural Science (Genetics)

ANP 504 : ARTIFICIAL INSEMINATION COURSE LECTURERS

MINISTRY OF LIVESTOCK DEVELOPMENT SMALLHOLDER DAIRY COMMERCIALIZATION PROGRAMME. Artificial Insemination (AI) Service

Staying good while playing God Looking after animal welfare when applying biotechnology

Appendix J. Genetic Implications of Recent Biotechnologies. Appendix Contents. Introduction

A POWERFUL IN VITRO FERTILIZATION

Unit B: Understanding Animal Reproduction. Lesson 3: Understanding Animal Reproduction Technology

Animal Pharming: The Industrialization of Transgenic Animals December 1999

Understanding Animal Reproduction Technology

Stem Cell Quick Guide: Stem Cell Basics

Religious Attitudes to Matters of Life

Impact of reproductive technologies on improved genetics in beef cattle

Human Cloning The Science and Ethics of Nuclear Transplantation

ANS 3319C Reproductive Physiology and Endocrinology Artificial Insemination in Cattle. Objectives. What are the advantages and disadvantages of AI?

Act of 5 December 2003 No. 100 relating to the application of biotechnology in human medicine, etc

Abbreviation key: NS = natural service breeding system, AI = artificial insemination, BV = breeding value, RBV = relative breeding value

Replacement Heifers Costs and Return on Investment Calculation Decision Aids

The impact of genomic selection on North American dairy cattle breeding organizations

Artificial Insemination in Cattle

PRODUCERS can choose to use natural

Guidance For Research Involving Human Embryonic Stem Cells, Germ Cells, And Cells Obtained From Cord Blood

MODEL FORM. [Program s SART Name and Number] INFORMED CONSENT FOR EGG DONORS

DNA Fingerprinting. Unless they are identical twins, individuals have unique DNA

Chapter 16 Reproductive Technology, Gene Therapy, and Stem Cells (modified)

RATES OF CONCEPTION BY ARTIFICIAL INSEMINATION OF. 1 Miss. Rohini Paramsothy Faculty of Agriculture University of Jaffna

Evaluations for service-sire conception rate for heifer and cow inseminations with conventional and sexed semen

Replacement Heifers Costs and Return Calculation Decision Aids

The Pillars of Agricultural Literacy

COMPARISON OF FIXED-TIME ARTIFICIAL INSEMINATION VS. NATURAL SERVICE IN BEEF COWS: REPRODUCTIVE EFFICIENCY AND SYSTEM COST

vision evolving guidelines

it right? activity (page 4) to highlight ethical issues associated with IVF

Class Time: 30 minutes. Other activities in the Stem Cells in the Spotlight module can be found at:

Genetics, Ethics &Meaning. Module 4

BREAK-EVEN COSTS FOR COW/CALF PRODUCERS

Artificial insemination:

ASSISTED REPRODUCTIVE TECHNOLOGY Adopted 2013

Areas of Concern. Reproductive Ethics: Issues &

Information for Egg Donors for Research

REPRODUCTION AND BREEDING Crossbreeding Systems for Beef Cattle

Artificial Insemination (AI) in Cattle

Course: AG 534 Zoology - Science of Animal Reproduction

The Costs of Raising Replacement Heifers and the Value of a Purchased Versus Raised Replacement

Authorized By: Holly C. Bakke, Commissioner, Department of Banking and Insurance.

Meiosis is a special form of cell division.

Whitney Fasbender. The University Of Kansas School of Nursing

REPRODUCTIVE MEDICINE AND INFERTILITY ASSOCIATES Woodbury Medical Arts Building 2101 Woodwinds Drive Woodbury, MN (651)

1. About dairy cows. Breed of dairy cows

Consumer Concerns About Hormones in Food

Genetic Engineering Philosophy of Medical Ethics series

ARTIFICIAL INSEMINATION STUDY

Global Gametes: Reproductive Tourism and Islamic Bioethics in the High-tech Middle East

Genomic Selection in. Applied Training Workshop, Sterling. Hans Daetwyler, The Roslin Institute and R(D)SVS

Public Perceptions of Labeling Genetically Modified Foods

Genomic selection in dairy cattle: Integration of DNA testing into breeding programs

Stem Cells and Hope for Patients

The ethics of stem cell research and treatment

Faculteit Diergeneeskunde. Prof. dr. G. Opsomer Faculty of Veterinary Medicine Ghent University.

PART I. SECTION 1. The legislature finds that an estimated. 128,000,000 Americans suffer from the crippling economic and

guides BIOLOGY OF AGING STEM CELLS An introduction to aging science brought to you by the American Federation for Aging Research

In Vitro Fertilization as a tool for the Genetics Improvement. History and Future Prospects.

Master Curriculum Topic Study: Human Body Systems

Illinois Insurance Facts Illinois Department of Financial and Professional Regulation Division of Insurance

Presentation by: Ahmad Alsahaf. Research collaborator at the Hydroinformatics lab - Politecnico di Milano MSc in Automation and Control Engineering

Non-fiction: Cloning Around

Artificial Insemination in Dairy Cattle 1

COURSE TITLE: Agricultural Animal Production and Management

Introduction. Introduction Nutritional Requirements. Six Major Classes of Nutrients. Water 12/1/2011. Regional Hay School -- Bolivar, MO 1

Preimplantation Genetic Diagnosis. Evaluation for single gene disorders

Lesson 13 Genetic modification

UNIFORM DATA COLLECTION PROCEDURES

Australian code for the care and use of animals for scientific purposes

LEUKODYSTROPHY GENETICS AND REPRODUCTIVE OPTIONS FOR AFFECTED FAMILIES. Leila Jamal, ScM Kennedy Krieger Institute, Baltimore MD

Cloning, Genetic Engineering, and IVF

FAQs: Gene drives - - What is a gene drive?

YouGov / Daily Telegraph Survey Results

Georgia Department of Education

Consent to Perform Preimplantation Genetic Screening (PGS) using. Comparative Genomic Hybridization (acgh) or Next Generation Sequencing (NGS)

Balanced. translocations. rarechromo.org. Support and Information

Reproductive Technology. Chapter 21

LIVESTOCK IMPROVEMENT S STUDENT RESOURCE SERIES ARTIFICIAL BREEDING

Managing cattle for the kind of beef you want your kids to eat.

Chapter 23 Definitions of GMO/LMO and modern biotechnology. Three different definitions but the same legal interpretation?

G. Cliff Lamb. North Florida Research and Education Center, Marianna, Florida University of Florida. Introduction

MEDICAL ETHICS MEDICAL ETHICS STUDIES PRINCIPLES OF RIGHT AND WRONG FOUR PRINCIPLES OF MEDICAL ETHICS AUTONOMY JUSTICE BENEFICENCE NON-MALEFICENCE

Stem Cells. What Are Stem Cells? Sources for Stem Cells. Stem cells. Medical Ethics 1. Cells able to develop into nearly any other type of cell.

Preimplantation Genetic Diagnosis Ethical Aspects. Sonya Al-Mohammed, MBBS, Arab Board, MSc*

Lesbian Pregnancy: Donor Insemination

Transcription:

Is the Market Ready for Milk from Cloned Cows? 3/15/06 Alison Van Eenennaam, Ph.D. Cooperative Extension Specialist Animal Biotechnology and Genomics alvaneenennaam@ucdavis.edu ODI

OUTLINE What is a clone? Embryo splitting Nuclear transfer Embryo Somatic Cell What are the concerns? Food Safety Animal Welfare and Ethical Issues Public Opinion

What is Biotechnology? Biotechnology - The application of science and engineering to living organisms.

Animal biotechnology Artificial selection (breeding programs) Artificial Insemination Embryo transfer Using DNA information for the markerassisted selection of superior animals

Barnyard Biotechnology Artificial Insemination 1940s One sire can inseminate 1000s of cows annually versus 40 using natural breeding Initially AI was seen to be against the laws of God, a repugnant practice that would lead to abnormal outcomes Embryo Transfer 1970s One cow can produce up to 200 calves versus 10 in a lifetime; significant but much less than AI from bulls In Vitro Fertilization 1990s - Salvage genetics from 400 cows with fertility problems annually

The public opposes animal biotechnology.. The majority (55%) of Americans believe that the genetic modification of animals is morally objectionable. Schilling, B. J., Hallman, W. K., Adelaja, A. O., and Marxen, L. J.2002. Consumer Knowledge of Food Biotechnology: A Descriptive Study of U. S. Residents. Food Policy Institute, Cook College, Rutgers - The State University of New Jersey. 25p. It should be noted that in this same study, consumer acceptance of traditional animal crossbreeding techniques was only 31 %, with 50% of respondents finding such practices morally wrong!

Animal biotechnology Artificial selection (breeding programs) Artificial Insemination Embryo transfer Using DNA information for the markerassisted selection of superior animals Cloning Genetic engineering

Public Attitude Towards Biotechnology How much have you heard about animal biotechnology? (IFIC, 2004) 45 40 35 30 25 20 15 10 5 0 39 31 21 8 A LOT SOME A LITTLE NOTHING http://ific.org/research/upload/2004-biotech-consumer-research.pdf

What have you heard/read about animal biotechnology? Cloning 17 % Faster Growth/Bigger Animals/More Meat, Milk, Eggs 9 % Hormones 8 % Nothing Specific 6% Genetic Engineering 5 % Disease Resistance/Healthier Animals/Safer Food 4 % Changes to Animal Feed 4 % Better Quality Meat 3 % Concerns about effects/testing needed 3 % Steroids 3 % Testing on Animals/Raised in Labs 2 % What is Fed to Animals/ How animals Fed 2 % Breeding/AI 2 % Mad Cow 2 % Other 11 % Don t Know/Refused 39 % http://ific.org/research/upload/2004-biotech-consumer-research.pdf

Cloning by embryo splitting

Cloning by embryo splitting

Embryo Transfer Laboratory Cloning by Nuclear Transfer Embryo nuclear transfer (since the 1980s) Cloning by Nuclear Transfer at UCDAVIS Tissue biopsy is taken from donor cow, Daisy Donor cells are grown in tissue culture Donor cell nucleus is transferred to recipient egg Cloned embryo is transferred to surrogate mother The two cloned calves, Dot and Ditto, on display at the State Fair, were born May 2003 Pregnancy is monitored by ultrasound

Dolly (1996), the first adult somatic cell nuclear transfer (SCNT) clone

Dolly rapidly became entangled with the debate over human cloning Ensuing discussion failed to elaborate on the reasons as to why cloning was developed

Embryo Transfer Laboratory Cloning by Nuclear Transfer Cloning by Nuclear Transfer at UCDAVIS Tissue biopsy is taken from donor cow, Daisy Donor cells are grown in tissue culture Donor cell nucleus is transferred to recipient egg Cloned embryo is transferred to surrogate mother The two cloned calves, Dot and Ditto, on display at the State Fair, were born May 2003 Pregnancy is monitored by ultrasound

Many animal species have been since been cloned from adult cells

The FDA continues to call for a voluntary prohibition of the marketing of milk or meat from SCNT clones and their offspring

Who s Buying? $20,000 Regancrest Emory Derry died unexpectedly.

Who s Buying? Full Flush Unable to supply market demand for his semen

Who s Buying? Specialty Cattle Producers Starlight: record 77 inches tip to tip

Milk and meat from cloned animals to market this year?

Are the milk and meat from SCNT clones safe for human consumption? 1. All studies have shown that food products derived from clones fall within normal industry standards or previously reported values for milk and meat. 2. Sample sizes are small in all studies although there are an increasing number of studies published FDA ASSESSMENT OF ANIMAL CLONING food products derived from animal clones and their offspring are likely to be as safe to eat as food from their non-clone counterparts, based on all the evidence available. http://www.fda.gov/cvm/documents/clraes.doc (issued 10/31/03)

Animal Welfare Concerns Large calf syndrome Under-developed respiratory, cardiovascular, and renal systems FDA ASSESSMENT OF ANIMAL CLONING Cloning technology does not present any type of risk that is not present with other forms of reproduction. However, the adverse outcomes may occur at a higher frequency with cloning than with other assisted reproductive technologies now in common use, such as in vitro fertilization or embryo transfer. http://www.fda.gov/cvm/documents/clraes.doc

Ethical Issues: Cloned Gizmos and Snuppies Gizmo $50,000 Snuppie 3/15/06 http://www.savingsandclone.com/

CA law to prohibit cloned and GM pets? AB 1428, as introduced, Levine. Commercial pet cloning. Existing law provides for the regulation of various types of businesses by the Department of Consumer Affairs. This bill would declare the intent of the Legislature to prohibit the commercial sale and transfer of cloned or genetically modified pet animals within California. http://www.nopetcloning.org/

Manx cat? Munchkin cat? Munchkin Manx

Public Attitudes Towards Different Animal Biotechnologies (IFIC, 2004) http://ific.org/research/upload/2004-biotech-consumer-research.pdf

Pew Initiative Poll 2005 Less than a quarter (23 %) of consumers believe food produced from animal clones is safe, while 43 % believe it is unsafe; and one-third (34%) of consumers do not have an opinion on the safety of animal cloning. A strong majority (63 %) of Americans believe government agencies should include moral and ethical considerations when making regulatory decisions about cloning and genetically modifying animals, with 53 percent feeling that way strongly. http://pewagbiotech.org/research/2005update/

http://pewagbiotech.org/research/2005update/2005summary.pdf

http://pewagbiotech.org/research/2005update/2005summary.pdf

What s up in the blogosphere? Posted by Christina Will cloned food sources by labeled as such? I am certainly not in support of it, will avoid it and will continue to support organic food sources as much as possible. What are our leaders thinking and why, as a US Citizen and registered voter, don't I get a say in this? Very disturbing! Posted by Quignoff There are many people that obviously do not know that we eat cloned, genetically engineered foods every single day. Nearly all of the plant foods that we eat have been engineered. Besides, our bodies have no idea that the food it's eating is cloned or not; dna is dna is dna as far as our stomachs and the microbes that live there are concerned. Posted by Troy Why not? Dead cow is dead cow regardless of its possible parentage. http://www.supermarketguru.com/page.cfm/14894

SUMMARY Embryo split and embryo nuclear transfer clones have been in the food supply for over 20 years. Unlikely that somatic cell nuclear transfer (SCNT) clones will be produced in large numbers for commercial agricultural purposes. A voluntary moratorium on marketing products from SCNT clones remains in effect despite the finding that they it is as safe to eat as food from non-clones. If the FDA finds cloned food products safe, they are unlikely to require mandatory labeling. Ethical and moral concerns dominate the public discussion about cloned animals.