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To help achieve these goals, researchers also studied the genetic makeup of several nonhuman organisms. These include the common human gut bacterium Escherichia coli, the fruit fly, and the laboratory mouse.
A unique aspect of the U.S. Human Genome Project is that it was the first large scientific undertaking to address potential ELSI implications arising from project data.
Another important feature of the project was the federal government's long-standing dedication to the transfer of technology to the private sector. By licensing technologies to private companies and awarding grants for innovative research, the project catalyzed the multibillion-dollar U.S. biotechnology industry and fostered the development of new medical applications .
Sequence and analysis of the human genome working draft was published in February 2001 and April 2003 issues of Nature and Science. See an index of these papers and learn more about the insights gained from them .
Human reproductive cloning is the production of a human fetus from a single cell by asexual reproduction. In 2001 a cloned embryo was reported made by nuclear transfer, though in 1993 cloned embryos were made by splitting human embryos. In the late 1990s reproductive cloning was used to produce clones of the adults of a number of mammalian species, including sheep, mice and pigs. The most famous of these was Dolly, the sheep. Many countries rushed to outlaw the possibility of reproductive cloning in humans. Most mammalian embryos can only be split into 2-4 clones; after that the cells lack the ability to start development into a human being.
Therapeutic cloning is the cloning of embryos containing DNA from an individual's own cell to generate a source of embryonic stem (ES) cell-progenitor cells that can differentiate into the different cell types of the body. ES cells are capable of generating all cell types, unlike multipotent adult-derived stem cells which generate many but not all cell types. The aim is to produce healthy replacement tissue that would be readily available. Since it is from the same body it is immunocompatible so that the recipients would not have to take immunosuppressant drugs for the rest of their lives, as they do if they receive an organ from another person.
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