Heart Attack-Stems Cells to The Rescue!!!!

Stem cells have been used to regrow cardiac muscle in heart attack patients for the first time, researchers have reported.

A new study published this week in The Lancet has described how patients’ own cardiac stem cells have been used to stimulate the growth of healthy tissue and reduce the scarring caused by heart attacks.

“When someone has a heart attack, up to 40% of the heart dies, and dead muscle is replaced by scar, not newly-formed muscle. The scar can’t contract and it predisposes [people] to arrhythmias, heart failure and death,” said co-author Konstantinos Malliaras from the Cedar-Sinai Heart Institute in Los Angeles.

“Up until our study, the existing dogma was that the scar, once formed, is permanent; there was no way to shrink the scar tissue and regrow healthy muscle.”

Cardiac stem cells harvested and infused back into the patient reduces scar damage and initiates healthy tissue growth.

Move away from bone marrow

Stem cells are a coup for this type of regenerative medicine because of their ability to produce and differentiate into different cells in the human body. When a heart attack occurs, the cardiac stem cells die and there are too few remaining stem cells to repair all the damaged tissue. Scientists thought that by infusing the heart with a large number of stem cells, this would kick-start the healing process.

Until recently, the preferred source of these stem cells was bone marrow, because of the bone marrow stem cells’ ability to produce a number of different tissues. Despite research showing that this method was safe, the effectiveness has been inconsistent across studies.

Cardiac stem cells are a more recent option and results have been positive. Malliaras and his colleagues have previously shown that cardiac stem cells are three to five times more effective than bone marrow in animals. A separate research group also used cardiac stem cells, publishing their results in the Lancet late last year. These researchers found an increased ability of the heart to pump blood and also showed reduced scar size, though they did not see new growth of healthy tissue.

Scar decreased by nearly 50%

In the current study, patients had suffered a heart attack in the four weeks prior to joining the study and were randomly split into two groups – eight patients received routine care while 17 underwent stem cell treatment. The stem cell treatment involved inserting a catheter in the neck to take a small biopsy of the heart – about the size of a course grain of sand.

“Biopsy procurement is a minimally invasive procedure that is usually performed in patients who get a heart transplant,” said Malliaras. “For the patient, biopsy procurement is entirely painless.”

Cells taken from the biopsy were harvested for 60 days on average, until a population of 25 million cells had been grown. These were then infused back into the patient’s heart. According to the researchers, MRI scans indicated remarkable results for the patients who received the stem cell treatment. “The scar was reduced by 47% and healthy cardiac tissue regrew in the place where once scar was. It is the first instance in medical history of true therapeutic regeneration in any organ,” said Malliaris.

Courtesy-Cosmos  Magazine

A Perfect Example Of Cloning Gone WRONG????

Are males necessary?

Maybe not for long, at least in an insect species whose females have begun to develop sperm-producing clones of their fathers—inside their bodies.

In the cottony cushion scale—a common agricultural pest that grows to about a fifth of an inch (half a centimeter) long—a new phenomenon has arisen: When some females develop in fertilized eggs, excess sperm grows into tissue within the daughters.

This parasitic tissue, genetically identical to the female’s father, lives inside the female and fertilizes her eggs internally—rendering the female a hermaphrodite and making her father both the grandfather and father of her offspring, genetically speaking.

Though this new form of reproduction hasn’t replaced cottony cushion scale sex, “this parasitic male has taken off like an epidemic in population,” said study leader Andy Gardner, an evolutionary theorist at the University of Oxford.

“Once [this trend] gets started, it’s going to sweep through the population so all the females carry it. So there’s no point for regular males to exist,” Gardner added.

If the females begin passing on the parasitic male to their offspring, there may eventually be no more need for “baby boy” cushion scales that grow up and produce sperm and fertilize females, Gardner said.

Gardner and the University of Massachusetts’s Laura Ross created a population model that predicted how females would respond to this infectious tissue living within their bodies. The results, published in the August issue of  The American Naturalist , suggest that the females would benefit from the infection, negating the need for males.

A cottony cushion scale mother and offspring.

Insect Sex Still a Mystery

Though the exact time line of male decline for the species is unknown, Gardner said, in the “long run, I’d expect the [insect species] to suffer because of asexuality.”

For instance, though 30 percent of animal species are asexual, in the “vast majority of cases, when we look at species that are asexual, they’re relatively recent [evolutionary] events … [and they] seem to go extinct quite rapidly.

“If you mate with yourself, that doesn’t generate the sort of adaptive variation that regular sex does.”

There are “obvious benefits” of straight-up sex, he said—the offspring get new combinations of genes that can make species overall more robust, he said.

Overall, it’s a mystery why there are so few insect hermaphrodites—only three species are known, all cushion scales. In general, insects are very sexually variable, reproducing in almost every way known to nature—including, in some species, males that can develop from unfertilized eggs.

Confusing matters, cushion scales are “not really hermaphroditic in the usual sense—it’s actually two ‘individuals’ in one body, [which] makes it more intriguing,” he said.

“We’re sort of groping around in the dark just now.”

Courtesy-National Geographic

Related Article-

Is It Extinction Time For This Antelope???

For the first time in 75 years, an entire genus of mammal may go the way of the dodo—unless a new conservation effort shepherded by Somalian herders succeeds.

The hirola, a large African antelope known for its striking, goggle-like eye markings, is the only remaining species in the genus Beatragus—and its numbers are dwindling fast, conservationists say.

The last mammal genus to blink out was Thylacinus, in 1936, with the death of the last Tasmanian Tiger. A genus is a taxonomic ranking between species and family.

Considered critically endangered by the International Union for Conservation Of Nature,the hirola has seen its numbers fall by as much as 90 percent since 1980. The latest survey, in February, found about 245 animals in fragmented pockets of northeastern Kenyaand southwestern Somalia, according to the Nature Conservancy.

In all, conservationists estimate there are fewer than 400 hirolas scattered throughout the species’ historic range of East Africa.

A range of factors, including climate change-related drought; unregulated hunting; habitat destruction; and more recently, predation have slashed populations.

Now the Ishaqbini Hirola Community Conservancy, a network of predominantly Somalian clans, is building a a new predator-free sanctuary for the species, according to Omar Tawane Dagane, the conservancy’s Kenya-based manager.

Most of the herders living along the Kenya-Somalia border “are friendly to wildlife,” Dagane said.

The locals also like hirolas because they don’t harm livestock, he said.

“That is why [it] was easy for us to advocate for construction of a predator-proof … hirola sanctuary in such a pastoralist setup.”

Conservation Gone “Viral”

Somalian clans formed the Ishaqbini conservancy in 1996 after seeing the benefits of self-organized conservancies in northeastern Kenya, an often lawless region prone to cattle raiding and general unrest, said Tim Tear , science director for the Nature Conservancy’s Africa Program, an Ishaqbini partner.

These conservancies, while setting aside land for protection of species such as elephants and buffalo, also provided exclusive rights to tourism companies. The majority of the tourism proceeds fund community needs, for example special operations for local children. The remaining percentage—about 40 percent—goes to fund conservation practices and employ game scouts to patrol and prevent poaching.

“This is one of the big reasons people are supportive—direct benefits to the communities and conservation and security value as well,” Tear said.

There are now 17 conservancies within the  Northern Rangelands Trust, a Kenya-based membership organization that helps coordinate and support the local initiatives, including Ishaqbini.

“This is the idea of conservation going viral,” he said.

Hirola to Thrive in Predator-Free Sanctuary?

A few years ago the Ishaqbini clans created an 8,000-acre (3,200-hectare) conservation area to protect hirolas, mainly by monitoring poaching and restricting livestock grazing.

With grazing curtailed, the grasslands bounced back—and so did predators such as African Lions and African Wild dogs, which have been increasingly preying on hirolas.

Now, with predation cutting hirola numbers by as much as 15 percent in the past year, the Ishaqbini conservancy is constructing what they say is a predator-proof fence around the new 6,000-acre (2,400-hectare) sub-sanctuary within the original conservation area.

Ideally, the new sanctuary will give the antelope a safe haven in which to breed and rebound, Ishaqbini’s Dagane said.

“People have a perception there’s no peace around here because of neighboring Somalia,” he said, “but Ishaqbini is very peaceful compared with other communities in the interior of Kenya.”

The Nature Conservancy’s Tear added that the Ishaqbini clans have “really identified with this animal.”

“They’ve made some really heroic decisions about saving land for the purposes of saving this species.”

Conserving Hirola Not Easy

Conservationists and government agencies have been working to save the hirola since the 1960s.

Because all attempts to breed hirolas in captivity have failed, conservation plans have mostly involved relocating the animals.

In 1963, for instance, the Kenya Wildlife Service captured 10 to 20 hirolas from northeastern Kenya and released them into Tsavo East National Park

In 1996, about 30 more hirolas from the Arawale National Reserve in northeastern Kenya were added to this “founding population,” according to the wildlife service’s website. There is now a stable, though isolated, population of about a hundred hirolas living in Tsavo.

Community Involvement Important

The Nature Conservancy’s Tear noted that for conservation for work long-term, “local people have to be engaged, involved, and supportive of conservation.”

Philipp Goeltenboth discovered just that in 1996. Now the director of WWF-Germany’s Forest Program, Goeltenboth at the time was working with the Kenya Wildlife Service to relocate the hirola as part of his master’s degree research.

In a controversial move, the government took the animals from an impoverished area where residents believed the animal was “one of last hopes in this area for tourism,” he said.

A court injunction initiated by the communities temporarily halted the translocation. According to a Kenyan court document dated August 29, 1996, locals brought the injunction on “the grounds that [the hirola] was a gift to the people of the area and should be left there.”

Overall, local communities had not been involved in the government’s initial relocation plan—”a big mistake,” Goeltenboth said.

“The Kenya Wildlife Service was a study in how not to do conservation,” he said. “They basically moved into the area with full force.”

The Kenya Wildlife Service did not respond to requests for comment.

Hirola Sanctuary Can’t Save the Species?

Yakub Dahiye, a scientist at the National museum of Kenya in Nairobi, has studied hirolas for several years and published research on the species.

He called the Ishaqbini conservancy “a noble community initiative” that can “partly contribute to wildlife conservation and tourism development.”

However, “I don’t think this conservancy alone can save the hirola,” Dahiye emphasized by email.

“Just like the local nomadic pastoralist, the hirola has a highly mobile habit.

“Given the small size of this conservancy and its limited/seasonal pastures, free-ranging hirola may not be permanently resident in the conservancy.”

What’s more, hirolas face threats other than predation. For one, growing human settlements have displaced the antelope from its dry-season habitat along Kenya’s Tana River, Dahiye said.

Hirolas are also forced to compete with cattle and sheep for food and water. Futhermore, traveling herders and their livestock can trample hirola grazing lands.

And despite the conservancy’s creation, modernization and changing lifestyles mean that some of the pastoralists’ conservation traditions are disappearing, Dahiye noted.

High Hopes for Hirola

Ultimately the Ishaqbini Conservancy’s Dagane envisions this slice of Africa as a regional hub for tourism and research.

“I’d like to see community conservation spread to neighboring communities, increase the number of wildlife, and get conservation into the minds of the younger generations for wise use of their natural resources in the future,” he said.

The Nature Conservancy’s Tear also has high expectations for Ishaqbini and its hirolas.

“People hear a lot about things in crisis, especially in Africa,” Tear said.

But “there are many reasons for there to be hope.”

Courtesy-National Geographic

The Mystery Of The Origin of Child Birth????

THE mystery of what separated mammals that nurture their young ones for nine months from the marsupials and egg layers has finally been uncovered.

A study has found that many of the genes behind the development of modern mammalian pregnancy are controlled by genetic elements called transposons, long referred to as “junk DNA.” The research team from university of Yale in the US looked at the DNA of uterine cells from the possum, a marsupial that gives birth two weeks after conception and shelters its developing young in a pouch, and compared them with cells from armadillos and humans, which both carry their children to term in a womb. The uterine cells of armadillos and humans shared more than 1,500 genes that possums lacked.

The team also found about 13 per cent of these genes were near to a particular kind of transposon specific to placental mammals. These transposons made uterine cells sensitive to the hormone progesterone, encouraged cells’ development into the placenta and influenced a variety of other changes central to modern placental pregnancy.

The paper was published in Nature Genetics on September 25.

Faith….The Biggest Hope in This Universe!!!!

One Of The Best Arguments.!! I have ever read

Don’t miss even a single word…. It’s Too good

An atheist professor of philosophy speaks to his class on the problem science has with God, The Almighty.
He asks one of his new students to stand and…..

Prof: So you believe in God?

Student: Absolutely, sir.

Prof: Is God good?

Student: Sure.

Prof: Is God all-powerful?

Student: Yes..

Prof: My brother died of cancer even though he prayed to God to heal him. Most of us would attempt to help others who are ill. But God didn’t. How is this God good then? Hmm?
(Student is silent.)

Prof: You can’t answer, can you? Let’s start again, young fella. Is God good?

Student: Yes.

Prof: Is Satan good?

Student: No.

Prof: Where does Satan come from?

Student: From….God…

Prof: That’s right. Tell me son, is there evil in this world?

Student: Yes.

Prof: Evil is everywhere, isn’t it? And God did make everything. Correct?

Student: Yes.

Prof: So who created evil?
(Student does not answer.)

Prof: Is there sickness? Immorality? Hatred? Ugliness? All these terrible things exist in the world, don’t they?

Student: Yes, sir.

Prof: So, who created them?
(Student has no answer.)

Prof: Science says you have 5 senses you use to identify and observe the world around you. Tell me, son…Have you ever seen God?

Student: No, sir.

Prof: Tell us if you have ever heard your God?

Student: No, sir.

Prof: Have you ever felt your God, tasted your God, smelt your God? Have you ever had any sensory perception of God for that matter?

Student: No, sir. I’m afraid I haven’t.

Prof: Yet you still believe in Him?

Student: Yes.

Prof: According to empirical, testable, demonstrable protocol, science says your GOD doesn’t exist.
What do you say to that, son?

Student: Nothing. I only have my faith.

Prof: Yes. Faith. And that is the problem science has.

Student: Professor, is there such a thing as heat?

Prof: Yes.

Student: And is there such a thing as cold?

Prof: Yes.

Student: No sir. There isn’t.
(The lecture the after becomes very quiet with this turn of events.)

Student: Sir, you can have lots of heat, even more heat, superheat, mega heat, white heat, a little heat or no heat..
But we don’t have anything called cold. We can hit 458 degrees below zero which is no heat, but we can’t go any further after that. There is no such thing as cold. Cold is only a word we use to describe the absence of heat. We cannot measure cold. Heat is energy Cold is not the opposite of heat, sir, just the absence of it .
(There is pin-drop silence in the lecture theatre.)

Student: What about darkness, Professor? Is there such a thing as darkness?

Prof: Yes. What is night if there isn’t darkness?

Student : You’re wrong again, sir. Darkness is the absence of something. You can have low light, normal light, bright
light, flashing light…..But if you have no light constantly, you have nothing and it’s called darkness, isn’t it? In reality, darkness isn’t. If it were you would be able to make darkness darker, wouldn’t you?

Prof: So what is the point you are making, young man?

Student: Sir, my point is your philosophical premise is flawed.

Prof: Flawed? Can you explain how?

Student: Sir, you are working on the premise of duality. You argue there is life and then there is death, a good God and a bad God. You are viewing the concept of God as something finite, something we can measure. Sir, science can’t even explain a thought.. It uses electricity and magnetism, but has never seen, much less fully understood either one.To view death as the opposite of life is to be ignorant of the fact that death cannot exist as a substantive thing. Death is
not the opposite of life: just the absence of it.
Now tell me, Professor.Do you teach your students that they evolved from a monkey?

Prof: If you are referring to the natural evolutionary process, yes, of course, I do.

Student: Have you ever observed evolution with your own eyes, sir?
(The Professor shakes his head with a smile, beginning to realize where the argument is going.)

Student: Since no one has ever observed the process of evolution at work and cannot even prove that this process is an on-going endeavor, are you not teaching your opinion, sir? Are you not a scientist but a preacher? (The class is in uproar.)

Student: Is there anyone in the class who has ever seen the Professor’s brain?
(The class breaks out into laughter.)

Student : Is there anyone here who has ever heard the Professor’s brain, felt it, touched or smelt it? No one appears to have done so. So, according to the established rules of empirical, stable, demonstrable protocol, science says that you have no brain,sir. With all due respect, sir, how do we then trust your lectures, sir?
(The room is silent. The professor stares at the student, his face unfathomable.)

Prof: I guess you’ll have to take them on faith, son.

Student: That is it sir… The link between man & god is FAITH . That is all that keeps things moving & alive.

I believe you have enjoyed the conversation…and if so…you’ll probably want your friends/colleagues to enjoy the same…won’t you?….this is a true story, and the

student was none other than …….
APJ Abdul Kalam, the former President of India

Dead Sea’s New Found Treasures!!!!

Dozens of giant craters spewing Fresh water and brimming with bacteria have been found at the otherwise barren bottom of the Dead Sea, new research shows.

In 2010 the first diving expedition to the springs revealed “a fantastic hot spot for life” in the lake, which lies on the border of Israel and Jordan, said team member Danny Ionescu, a marine microbiologist for the Max Planck Institute in Germany.

The team found several craters—each about 33 feet (10 meters) wide and 43 feet (13 meters) deep—at 100-foot (30-meter) depths on the lake’s bottom. The craters were covered with films and sometimes surprisingly thick mats of new bacterial species, Ionescu said.

These tiny communities live near thin plumes of fresh water that shoot from undersea springs, whose presence has long been suspected based on peculiar ripples on the Dead Sea’s surface.

To reach the springs, divers searched for abrupt drops along the seafloor while contending with very low visibility.

“When you put your head in [a crater] you cannot see anything—you have to have faith and will to explore,” Ionescu said.

But once the water cleared near the base of the crater, seeing the plumes jetting from the earth was “a fascinating feeling,” he said.

Dead Sea Truly Almost Dead

Rivers and streams—most notably the Jordan River—once regularly infused fresh water into the Dead Sea.

The basin has no outlet, so water escapes only by evaporation. As fresh water evaporates, salty minerals dissolved in the water get left behind. Over time, this process made the Dead Sea much saltier than ocean water.

The lake’s saltiness means that larger organisms such as fish and frogs can’t survive in the Dead Sea. But a high concentration of magnesium also makes it surprising to find microbes in the lake.

“There are other hypersaline environments that are full of microbial life,” Ionescu noted. “This, in my opinion, makes our discovery even more surprising.”

In the 1950s Jordan cut off the Jordan River’s supply to the Dead Sea to gain drinking water. The move severely lowered the lake’s water level—a loss that continues by up to a meter (four feet) a year, according to the research team.

Water in the lake, which already sits in the lowest place on Earth, has fallen by more than 80 feet (25 meters) in the past 40 years.

Few biologists have studied the water body in recent years, except following two major algae bloom events that colored the Dead Sea red in 1980 and 1992.

The surface blooms were caused by organisms different than those recently discovered at depth, Ionescu noted.

In general, the “study really changes how we see the Dead Sea, from a biological perspective,” said Kelly Bidle, an environmental microbiologist at Rider University in New Jersey who studies bacteria that live in salty habitats.

That’s because “seeing this diversity in a place we had never thought was there before” is very exciting, she said.

“Impressive” Craters Unique to Dead Sea

The 2010 expedition mapped an “impressive” network of about 30 craters, a landscape that has no parallel elsewhere on Earth, said team leader Ionescu, whose research is soon being submitted for publication.

Preliminary analyses of samples collected in the craters suggest that the springs’ bacterial communities are very diverse—akin to what you’d find living on rocks in a regular saltwater sea, he added.

The top of the springs’ rocks are covered with green biofilms, which use both sunlight and sulfide—naturally occurring chemicals from the springs—to survive. Exclusively sulfide-eating bacteria coat the bottoms of the rocks in a white biofilm.

Not only have the organisms evolved in such a harsh environment, Ionescu speculates that the bacteria can somehow cope with sudden fluxes in fresh water and saltwater that naturally occur as water currents shift around the springs.

The existence of such adaptable bacteria is an “intriguing” idea that needs more research, Rider University’s Bidle said.

As of right now, “there is no such documented species that exists that could fit this bill”—all highly salt-adapted bacteria die when placed in fresh water, and vice versa, she noted.

If “your machinery is wired for high salt, it’s very difficult to imagine that you could go from an extreme amount of salt to near-freshwater biology.”

Even so, Bidle doesn’t totally rule out the idea: “When it comes to inhabiting extreme environments, nothing surprises me when it comes to microbial life,” she said.

Dead Sea Diving Not for Everyone

Ionescu and colleagues will visit the underwater craters again in October to study more about the behaviors and life cycles of the newfound bacteria.

It’s no easy task—each diver has to carry 90 pounds (40 kilograms) of weight to lower his or her buoyancy, since the sea’s high salt content tends to make people float.

Divers will also need to wear full face masks to protect their eyes and mouths. That’s because accidentally swallowing Dead Sea salt water would cause the larynx to inflate, resulting in immediate choking and suffocation.

Likewise, the intensely salty water would instantly burn and likely blind the eyes—both reasons why Dead Sea swimmers rarely fully submerge their bodies, Ionescu noted.

“It’s a very unique experience,” Ionescu said of diving in the Dead Sea, but “I wouldn’t recommend it for recreational diving.”

Courtesy-National Geographic.

Is Cloning Really The Answer To All Our Problems????

For ages,We humans have been trying to find that Magic Wand which will ward off all evils from our life…..Ultimately we found it…..The answer is Science…..We have managed to bring advances in almost all fields that Human mind can grasp on…..But the only hitch is that,in attempt to find answers to unsolved questions…..We have only increased our quotient of  problems….

The latest innovation on the block is Cloning….The concept is nothing new…..The most common bacteria,insects and plants have been reproducing asexually using this process…..But it’s only recently that scientists have coined the term “Clone” and started using this process….to produce genetically similar copies of DNA,cells and even whole organisms…..So,why are scientists so much interested in this new technique-

1) Transgenic animals can be cloned to produce enormous amounts of pharmaceutical products like proteins in their milk or Insulin or factor VIII to treat Hemophilia and other genetic diseases.

2) Stem cells can be cloned to mimic other cells which can pave ways to cure diseases like Cancer and Alzheimer’s as well can be used to study human development

3) Molecular cloning process can help in forensics which helps to get closer cut of crime scenes and the culprit.

4) Cloning can also be used for Organ culture….for growing organs and help the patients who require organ transplants (because of the scarcity of organ donors)

5) Cloning offers couples a chance dealing with problem of infertility to have their own child.

6) To produce transgenic plants that are more stronger,more resistant to diseases and gives better productivity.

7) Attempts are also on for the cloning of extinct and endangered species

Now this is pretty image painted by scientists world wide….who advocate this process….But there are many other prospects which unfortunately cloud all these beneficial facts…..Let’s just burst some bubbles of Myth regarding this technique which for ages has been on the minds of people and also the mainstream subject for many successful fictional movies….

Let’s start off with the beginnings….

1) Transgenic animals without any doubt have the potential for large scale production of commercial products….But the technology is still very uncertain….many complications surround this technique….What ever precautions may be taken,its still quite impossible to match the minute detailing with which Nature creates things in its stride….Best example is Dolly,the cloned sheep…..Its birth bought laurels to its creators….But the sheep survived for only two years which is much shorter than the normal life span of Sheep….and unfortunately died of diseases which were unknown in sheep of her age…..Imagine cloning going wrong all the way and ending up with clones like this….

Cloning gone ALL wrong...

Tried cloning a Bat...ended with a Dracula....

2) Stem cells are widely being researched for their potential to be manipulated into different cell types….But this brings in storm from ethical groups which consider destroying cells as equivalent to killing the individual itself…..All in all,what’s the guarantee that this technology will not be misused and will not fall into wrong hands like terrorists….The implications would be sheer destruction….No one needs to be reminded of the times when the most developed nation on planet,America was sent into a panic attack when lyophilized samples of Bacillus anthracis….Known to common man as “Anthrax” was mailed to common public….Imagine having deadly weapon lying in your mail box…..Quite frightening!!!!

3) Molecular cloning helps us clone familiar copies of desired DNA fragment which is then used for fingerprinting or desired protein production….But for cloning,we require DNA fragment of desired length….for that we need molecular markers….which have to be designed keeping in mind several factors like Antibiotic resistance genes and others…..which ultimately increases the cost of the product….keeping it out of the reach of the common public….Moreover,losing the gene diversity is another disadvantage….Because gene diversity is only thing that saves a population from being wiped out in climatic difficulties…..

4) Organ culture is being pursued now because of immediate needs for organ,because of the shortage of willing donors…..So now the latest idea is culturing organs from other organisms like pig…..But this raises the essential question of Graft Rejection….will our body’s immune system accept foreign organ from an animal which is completely different from us Humans….what would be the consequences if the experiment went horribly wrong and resulted in the death of the patient…..Taking organs from natural and close relatives will always be the best viable option!!!

5) Next problem which is being claimed to be solved with cloning is Infertility…..but even this is spelled with problems…..The technique being highly uncertain doesn’t always yield the required results….Take the case of Dolly….about 277 embryos were destroyed before Dolly finally materialized….Imagine the heartache the couple would go through if the process failed and left them childless again….Moreover cloning produces an exact copy of original….coupled with the genetic diseases that the person is suffering with…..Do we really need to clone and create more disease ridden copies of our own generations…..The next problem would definitely concern the character of the clone….How can we guarantee that the clone born will be of good moral character and be of any use to the society and not be reason of mayhem….Imagine what will be the result of having many clones of corrupt dictator….Ever thought where the world will end in such a situation!!!!

Why Cloning must be stopped???

6) The biggest example of cloning gone wrong all the way is in plants….POMATO….what the scientist were trying to grow was a transgenic plant which produces potatoes in roots and tomatoes in shoots…..But the ultimate result was a disaster…..The plant bore fruits which look like potato on outside and taste like tomato on the inside (Although this may not be problem for people who prefer to have two flavours combined in their food:-P)….

Potato on outside...Tomato inside!!!!

7) The last but not the least are the attempts to “Bring back The DEAD”….That’s right….Scientists are in close contest to clone extinct creatures from their DNA samples retrieved….Asian Gaur and Pyrenean ibese were cloned but new borns died within few months because of physical defects….Last that I heard was that Researchers at Kyoto University are hoping to produce a baby mammoth within 6 years….But then the question arises that….If all dead animals are reborn and start roaming the planet again….Then where would we Humans go???…..Now imagine sharing your garden space with Mammoth or having a Dinosaur hanging around your skyscraper….

Furthermore,in the absence of Natural parents…who would teach these animals their natural behavior or way of life…..We could surely learn a lesson or two from the recently released movie “The Rise Of The Planet Of Apes”……


So friends….I don’t think the idea of “Playing God” is that enticing….Let’s just not complicate things more for ourselves and just leave the job of “CREATION” to Mother Nature…..because creating something that is absolutely perfect is much beyond the Human imagination…..We need to respect Nature…..for It can do(without technology)….what we Humans can never do (despite having that technology)…..

©Krishnaveni Balasubramanian