Evolution 2.0: Gene Editing Could Bring Extinct Species Back
to Life
By June Javelosa
In Brief… Ecologists published guidelines that identify
factors for choosing which species our planet would be best served to revive.
One animal that
fits these guidelines, the wooly mammoth, could likely be revived using the DNA
editing tool CRISPR.
De-Extinction
The Anthropocene—a proposed new geological era defined by
human domination of the planet—will be marked by the loss of two-thirds of
wildlife on Earth. Just let that settle in a minute.
According to Living Planet Index, this is the reality we will
soon be facing. The implications of this loss on our ecosystem will be
significant, and have prompted scientists to look into the concept of
“de-extinction,” in an effort to bring lost species back to life. Surprisingly,
the idea is not far fetched as one might think.
While the idea may prompt thoughts of Jurassic Park,
de-extinction is anchored on the premise of bringing back animals that the
ecosystem would benefit the from the most (i.e. probably not dinosaurs). And
with new advances in gene-editing technology, it might actually be possible.
To that end, ecologists from the University of California,
Santa Barbara (UCSB) published guidelines that identify factors for choosing
which species our planet would be best served to revive. The UCSB team focuses
on three main points:
Focus on recently
extinct animals, rather than species we lost thousands of years ago.
Select target
species from guilds with low functional redundancy
Only work with
species that can be restored to levels of abundance that meaningfully restore
ecological function.
Back to Life
Following this criteria, Jurassic Park is surely out of the
running. However, the wooly mammoth could be a candidate. This species could
potentially convert the Arctic tundra back to grasslands, and slow climate
change. Using the DNA editing tool CRISPR, we are now actually a step closer to
bringing the wooly mammoth to life. After successfully copying genes from the
extinct animal, scientists spliced it into the genome of an Asian elephant.
From the study, published in Popular Science:
The scientists
spliced genes for the mammoths’ small ears, subcutaneous fat, and hair length
and color into the DNA of elephant skin cells. The tissue cultures represent
the first time woolly mammoth genes have been functional since the species went
extinct around 4,000 years ago.
Alongside gene editing, other possible approaches to
de-extinction could be backbreeding and cloning.
“Can we thoughtfully
use this tool to do real conservation?” one of the authors of the guidelines,
UCSB ecologist Douglas McCauley asked. “Answering that question is going to
require a lot of perspectives, not only from the geneticists who are leading
the process, but also from other types of scientists — ecologists, conservation
biologists, ecosystem managers.”
Polarizing opinions regarding this initiative are expected,
but they will at least start a conversation among the scientific community as
to how researchers can move forward in the most ecologically intelligent way
possible.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Please leave a comment.