Bookmark and Share
News:
Pet dog to be cloned by Korean biotech
Posted by Bob Grant
[Entry posted at 15th February 2008 07:50 PM GMT]

A South Korean biotech company has announced it will, for the first time ever, commercially clone a pet dog, according to reports coming out of the country.

RNL Bio said last week that it received an order from Californian Bernann McKunney, to clone her deceased pet pitbull, Booger, to the tune of $150,000. Booger died in 2005, but not before McKinney had tissue from his ear preserved.

The Korean company told the BBC that the cloning will take place at Seoul National University (SNU), where the first dog, Afghan hound Snuppy, was successfully cloned as a proof of concept in 2005. The SNU team that will recreate Booger is headed by Lee Byeong-chun, who was a colleague of Hwang Woo-suk, the disgraced Korean stem cell scientist who admitted fabricating data on human embryonic stem cell lines in 2006. Hwang's dog cloning work, however, was determined to be legitimate, and the SNU team went on, after Hwang's departure from the university, to successfully clone wolves.

Apparently, McKunney was so attached to Booger because the loyal dog once saved her life after another dog bit her arm off.

Commercial pet cloning is not exactly a new phenomenon. In 2004, San Francisco-based company Genetic Savings and Clone became the first company to clone a cat for a customer, who shelled out $50,000 for the pet.

Avoiding any of the troubles faced by other hopeful owners of bioengineered pets, McKunney will reportedly pay RNL Bio's fee only when she has her cloned companion in hand.

Latest News


Front Cover

Register for FREE Online Access

  • »Current issue
  • »Best Places to Work and Salary surveys
  • »Daily news and monthly contents emails

Register »

Subscribe to the Magazine

  • »Monthly print issues
  • »Unlimited online access
  • »Special offers on books, apparel, and more

Subscribe »

Library Subscriptions
Recommend to a Librarian

Masthead | Contact | Advertise | Privacy Policy
© 1986-2012 The Scientist