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Chinese clone mad cow-resistant calf

Chinese scientists have succeeded in cloning a cow with genes for resistance to mad cow disease, the official Xinhua news agency says.
Scientists assist with the birth of China's first cloned calf with genes resistant to mad-cow disease at the Laiyang Agro-Science Institute in Shandong on Tuesday. Scientists say further tests are needed to determine whether the technique was successful.
Scientists assist with the birth of China's first cloned calf with genes resistant to mad-cow disease at the Laiyang Agro-Science Institute in Shandong on Tuesday. Scientists say further tests are needed to determine whether the technique was successful.AP
/ Source: Reuters

Chinese scientists have succeeded in cloning a cow with genes for resistance to mad-cow disease, the official Xinhua news agency said on Wednesday.

The birth of the 121-pound (55-kilogram) calf in the eastern province of Shandong comes three years after a team led by now-disgraced South Korean scientist Hwang Woo-suk cloned cows with a protein structure resistant to mad-cow disease, also known as bovine spongiform encephalopathy or BSE.

"Scientists with the Laiyang Agro-Science Institute in Shandong said they used gene-transplant technology to introduce the genes to the calf cloned from cells of an adult cow," Xinhua said.

The research was led by Dong Yajuan and Bo Xuejin — who succeeded in cloning China's first and second healthy cows in 2001 — in collaboration with a Japanese university.

State television reported that further tests would be required on the calf as it grows to verify the effectiveness of the transplanted genes.