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£63,000 to clone a dog
[The process involves obtaining live cells
from a living dog or a dog five days after it has died. Dogs that have similar ovulation time are selected as egg donors and surrogate mothers. Eggs are collected from the egg donor through a procedure called ‘flushing’ and the nuclei of the eggs, which contain DNA of the egg donor, is removed. Then donor cell is then injected into the enucleated egg and the two cells are ‘fused’ together. This fusion procedure produces a cloned embryo that is transferred into a surrogate dog. The whole process takes less than a day but comes with a hefty price tag, at around $100,000 or £63,000 to clone one dog.] Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencete...#ixzz2j5ftrY00 http://i.dailymail.co.uk/i/pix/2013/...86_634x386.jpg Ms Tarantola said: 'I really can see no difference between them. So many of their gestures and the way they play is identical' I am sure some Rich will use this this service |
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