| HONOLULU (AP)
MAY 10, 2000 — Cumulina, the world's first cloned mouse, has died
of old age.
The University of Hawaii
medical school said that Cumulina died in her sleep last Friday of natural
causes. The mouse was 2 years, seven months old — about seven months
above average.
The mouse made headlines
when the results of the distinctive cloning technique of Dr. Ryuzo
Yanagimachi's team were reported in the journal Nature in July 1998.
The scientists turned out
more than 50 carbon-copy mice using what was believed to be a more
reliable cloning technique than the one used to create Dolly the sheep.
The nucleus of a cell from
one mouse was injected through a tiny needle into an egg donated by a
second mouse. The egg's original genetic package was removed. The donor
nucleus came from cumulus cells, which surround the developing eggs in the
ovaries of female mice.
The technique gave Cumulina
her name.
Cumulina raised two litters
before "retiring.'' About eight months ago, Cumulina developed a skin
tumor, common in aging mice, and the tumor was removed. She had otherwise
been healthy and active until several days before her death, the
university said. |