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To: Peace who wrote (35702)12/8/2000 2:04:45 PM
From: Frank Griffin  Respond to of 50167
 
From the same people who cloned the sheep? What do you think?

12/06 11:50 Dolly creators to make GM chickens to fight cancer

By Patricia Reaney

LONDON, Dec 6 (Reuters) - The Scottish scientists who created Dolly, the world's first cloned mammal, announced a deal on Wednesday with U.S. biotech company Viragen Inc <VRA.N> to breed chicken that produce life-saving drugs in their eggs.

Dr Helen Sang, of Edinburgh's Roslin Institute said the deal will combine the nuclear transfer technology used to make Dolly with Viragen's expertise in developing anti-cancer proteins.

"The essence of this project is to create chickens which produce eggs containing new drugs to treat many serious diseases, including cancer," Sang said in a statement.

Roslin scientists are already developing cows, sheep, goats and rabbits to provide proteins for drugs in their milk but birds provide a cheaper, faster and virtually unlimited production process through laying eggs.

"This collaborative effort is being undertaken to enable the production of a wide variety of drugs in greater volume and at a fraction of the cost when compared to conventional manufacturing methods," explained Gerald Smith of Florida-based Viragen.

NO SIGN OF BRITNEY THE CHICKEN

News of the deal that was announced at Edinburgh Castle was leaked in British newspapers during the weekend, along with news that Britney, reportedly one of a flock of genetically modified birds, would make an appearance.

But it seems to have been a case of counting eggs before they are hatched.

"There is no Britney," a Roslin spokeswoman told Reuters.

"The announcement is about work to be done in the future. It is not done yet," she added.

Dolly the sheep was produced by taking the nucleus out of a cell from the mammary gland of an adult animal and fusing it, using an electrical current, into another sheep egg cell from which the nucleus had been removed.

The same technology will allow scientists, for the first time, to precisely control where and how genes are inserted into hens.

"The collaboration with Viragen is a key part of our strategy to expand the institute's development of medical applications of Dolly technology," said Professor Grahame Bulfield, the director of the Roslin Institute.

TranXenoGen Inc (TXN.L>, a British company that specialises in the production of human therapeutic proteins in chicken eggs is working on a similar project.

It is estimated that the genetically modified chickens will lay about 250 eggs, containing proteins for drugs, a year. Viragen is collaborating with Britain's Cancer Research Campaign to develop a vaccine for the treatment of breast, ovarian and colorectal cancer.

It is also working with the Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center in New York on a treatment for skin cancer.

Viragen's lead product, a treatment for hepatitis C called Omniferon, is being tested in clinical trials in Europe. ((London newsroom +44 207 542 8958, fax +44 207 542 9780))

COPYRIGHT © 1999 REUTERS LIMITED. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.



To: Peace who wrote (35702)12/8/2000 2:21:58 PM
From: JDinBaltimore  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 50167
 
Glad to hear that Peace, and I think that was a very wise, and safe move... This verdict, when it comes, is going to move these markets more than Greenspan ever could, I'd hate to be on the wrong side riding a CIEN or BRCD!

Congrats

John