Russian
researchers reported last week that they’d discovered a very well
preserved mammoth carcass lying under ice and tundra in the Lyakhovsky
Islands north of the Arctic Circle. Word of the find, and the fact that
flowing blood was recovered from the beast, spread around the popular
press like wildfire. “The fragments of muscle tissues, which we’ve found
out of the body, have a natural red color of fresh meat,” said
expedition leader Semyon Grigoriev in a statement
from North-Eastern Federal University (NEFU) in Yaktusk, Siberia. “The
blood is very dark, it was found in ice cavities bellow the belly, and
when we broke these cavities with a poll pick, the blood came running
out.”
Grigoriev noted that the discovery could be just the spark needed for a
joint mammoth cloning project between NEFU and the South Korean Sooam Biotech Research Foundation.
“It was important to discover the mammoth in cold weather, because the
unique discovery would melt in summer or autumn, and the priceless
material for joint project ‘Mammoth rebirth’ of NEFU and Sooam
foundation could disappear from thawing and wild animals,” he said.
But is the hope of finding viable DNA and possibly even intact cells in the mammoth really that high? Scientific American
reached out to some mammoth experts who weren’t involved in the latest
discovery, which was announced in the press before publication in the
scientific literature, to temper the enthusiasm. “[The Russian team has]
not found any ‘living cell’—at most they could hope to find what the
cloning enthusiasts might call a cell with ‘viable’ DNA, meaning that it
would be intact enough to use in the context of a cloning effort,”
wrote Daniel Fisher of the University of Michigan in an email to Scientific American.
“In fact, although there is much talk of ‘viability’ of this sort, I
think it remains to be demonstrated that any DNA from a mammoth meets
this criterion. In general, ancient DNA is highly fragmented and by no
means ‘ready to go’ into the next mammoth embryo.”
The University of Manitoba’s Kevin CampbellScientific American
that the blood, which is apparently still in a liquid state even at
-17° C, very well could contain intact proteins. “Since the sample was
collected from outside the body, it is likely that there is also
‘contamination’ from myoglobin and possibly bacteria (for example),” he
wrote in an email to the magazine. “Based on the color alone, I think it
is pretty safe to say that there is indeed a fair amount of hemoglobin
(and possibly myoglobin) in the vials.”
, who has participated in research that successfully reconstructed mammoth hemoglobin using ancient DNA, told
Cambell and Fisher both indicated that the mammoth research community
is very interested in this recent discovery and that the newly unearthed
carcass will now be studied in great detail to answer some of these
intriguing questions.
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