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China's First Cloned Calf Had Oversized Heart, Experts Say


A dissection over the weekend suggested that the death of Weiwei, China's first cloned calf, was likely to be a result of abnormal physiological structure rather than a failure of the cloning technology.

The dissection showed that Weiwei had an oversized heart and liver and five lobes in its right lung, but its intestinal tract and genital system were normal, said Professor Ma Shiyuan, a member of the embryo transplantation project, who dissected the calf Saturday.

  

However, Ma and his colleagues have not yet been able to identify the exact reason for Weiwei's death. "Further cell analysis and research are necessary," said Chen Dayuan, a researcher with the Institute of Zoology under the Chinese Academy of Sciences.

  

Chen himself, though, is also inclined to believe that structural problems caused Weiwei's death.

Weiwei, a female calf, was born through a Cesarean section at 9:25 pm last Friday at the Jinan-based Shandong Zhongda Animal Embryo Engineering Center, but died a little over one hour after her birth.

The birth of Weiwei marked the first successful experiment of its kind wholly conducted in China.

Under the same research program, a dozen other pregnant cows are expected to give birth to cloned calves in the days to come.

(Xinhua News Agency January 21, 2002)

In This Series

China's Second Cloned Calf Safe

China's First Cloned Calf Confirmed Dead

China's First Cloned Calf Born

Chinese Government Opposes Human Cloning

Chinese/French Experts Urge Ban on Human Cloning

China’s Cloned Goat Gives Birth to Twins

References

China's Calf-cloning Technology at Advanced Level

Two Cloned Calves Milk the Limelight

China's Cloned Calf in Good Condition

China Clones Scores of Plants, Pigs, Sheep, Rabbits, Cows

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