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Editorials

Scientists take ‘significant step’ in bringing extinct mammoths back from dead

In an attempt to bring back long lost extinct mammals that last walked during the Ice Age, scientists have taken a
Published March 13, 2019 Updated March 15, 2019

In an attempt to bring back long lost extinct mammals that last walked during the Ice Age, scientists have taken a ‘significant step’ to help them make an appearance back on Earth.

The giant woolly mammoth with huge shaggy torsos and long curved tusks were once found centuries ago during the Ice Age. Japanese researchers are now trying to bring them back to life, claiming to have already taken a ‘significant step’.

The team from Kindai University in Osaka extracted bone marrow and muscle tissue from the remains of a mammoth named Yuka, who has been frozen in Siberian permafrost for over 28,000 years, reported Telegraph.

Around 42,000 years old frozen worms brought back to life

After authenticating the extracted tissue samples through whole-genome sequencing techniques, the team searched for cell nuclei remains, finding total 88 nucleus-like structures from the muscle sample. They then injected cell nuclei from the mammoth’s muscle tissue into mouse cell eggs. This resulted in signs of biological activities.

The biological activity detected in the mouse’s egg cells included a type of structural formulation that reportedly precedes cell division. They also found possible signs of repair to the damaged mammoth DNA. One of the authors Kei Miyamoto told Nikkei that these results marked a ‘significant step towards bringing mammoths back from the dead’.

However, despite the positive findings, the researchers acknowledged that they still have a long way to go before the species come back from the dead. Miyamoto added, “We want to move our study forward to the stage of cell division,” as per Independent.

Copyright Business Recorder, 2019

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