-{A|zh-cn: cloning; Zh-hk: transplantation; Zh-mo: transplantation; Zh-tw: The clone of the English word}-comes from the Greek word KL! N' (twig) In horticulture, the word "clone" was used until the 20th century. Later, sometimes' e' is added to the end of the word to become' clone' to indicate that' o' is pronounced as a long vowel. Recently, with the widespread use of this concept and word in public life, spelling has been limited to the use of "cloning". The Chinese translation of this word is transliterated as' -{clone}-' in Chinese mainland, but it is often translated as' transfer' or' copy' in Hong Kong and Taiwan. The previous' -{clone}-' is like the transliteration of' copy', which has the disadvantage of not looking at the literal meaning; The latter's "copy" can roughly express the meaning of cloning, but it is not accurate and easy to be misunderstood.
Cloning is usually artificially induced asexual reproduction or natural asexual reproduction (such as plants). Cloning is a multicellular organism, genetically identical to another organism. Clones can be natural clones, such as asexual reproduction or individuals with identical genes (just like identical twins). But what we usually mean by cloning is an identical copy produced by conscious design.
In biology, cloning is usually used in two aspects: cloning a gene or cloning a species. Cloning a gene refers to obtaining a gene from one individual (for example, by PCR), then inserting it into another individual (usually by vector), and then studying or utilizing it. Cloning sometimes refers to successfully identifying a certain -{A|zh-cn: phenotype; Zh-tw: dominant gene. So when a biologist says that the gene of a disease has been cloned successfully, that is to say, the position and DNA sequence of this gene have been determined. Obtaining a copy of this gene can be considered as a by-product of identifying this gene.
Cloning an organism means creating a new object with exactly the same genetic information as the original organism. Under the background of modern biology, this usually includes somatic cell nuclear transfer. In somatic cell nuclear transfer, the nucleus of oocytes is removed and replaced by the nucleus taken from cloned organisms. Usually, oocytes and their transplanted nuclei should come from the same species. Because the nucleus contains almost all the genetic information of life, the host oocyte will develop into an organism genetically the same as the nuclear donor. Although mitochondrial DNA has not been transplanted here, it is still relatively rare, and its impact on organisms can usually be ignored.
In horticulture, cloning refers to the offspring of a single plant produced by vegetative propagation. Many plants obtain a large number of offspring from one plant by cloning this asexual reproduction.
What is cloning?
Cloning is a transliteration of the English word clone, which comes from the Greek word klone. Its original intention is to cultivate plants through asexual reproduction or vegetative reproduction, such as stem cutting and grafting.
Today's cloning refers to the asexual reproduction of organisms through somatic cells and the population of offspring individuals with exactly the same genotype formed through asexual reproduction. Cloning can also be understood as copying, copying, that is, producing the same copy from the prototype, and its appearance and genetic genes are exactly the same as the prototype.
What did China clone?
Frog: 1952, unsuccessful.
Carp: 1963, as early as 1963, China scientist Tong Dizhou successfully cloned a female carp by injecting the genetic material of a male carp into the egg of a female carp, which was 33 years earlier than Dolly's cloning. However, because the related papers were published in a China sci-tech journal and were not translated into English, they are not well-known internationally. (From: Public Broadcasting Company)
In ancient mythology, the Monkey King turned his hair into countless bizarre stories of the Monkey King, expressing the illusion that human beings copied themselves. 1938, German scientists first proposed the idea of mammalian cloning. 1996, after Dolly the sheep was born, cloning quickly became the focus of the world's attention, and people could not help but wonder: Will we follow the sheep? This kind of problem makes everyone feel uneasy. However, the opposition to cloning has not stopped the unremitting pursuit of scientists. With the successful cloning of primates, such as cattle, rats, pigs and even monkeys, which are closest to human biological characteristics, it has been believed that one day, scientists will use a human cell to replicate exactly the same person as the cell provider. Cloning human beings is no longer a dream in science fiction, but a reality that will surface. At present, three foreign organizations have officially announced that they will conduct human cloning experiments. Professor zavos of the University of Kentucky in the United States is working with an Italian expert named Antinori to plan to clone a human within two years.
Because human cloning may bring complicated consequences, most countries with advanced biotechnology have adopted an attitude of explicit prohibition or strict restriction. Clinton said: "It is dangerous to copy human beings through this technology and should be put an end to it!" "Hong Guofan, member of Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference and director of the National Gene Research Center of the Chinese Academy of Sciences, also made it clear that he opposed the study of human cloning and advocated distinguishing cloning technology from human cloning.
Is human cloning really as terrible as the devil in Pandora's box?
In fact, the main reason why people can't accept human cloning experiments is the obstacle of traditional ethics. For thousands of years, human beings have been following the way of sexual reproduction, but human cloning is a product in the laboratory and a life created under human manipulation. Especially in the west, cloning "abandoning God to divide Adam and Eve" has been opposed by many religious organizations. Moreover, the relationship between clones is also contrary to the traditional ethical way of determining kinship by blood. All these make it impossible for clones to find a suitable place to live in traditional human ethics. However, as He Xiuxiu, an academician of the Chinese Academy of Sciences, said, "The ethical issues of human cloning should be faced squarely, but there is no reason to oppose scientific and technological progress." . The development of human society itself tells us that it is a historical progress for science and technology to drive people to update their ideas, while it is rigid to bind the development of science and technology with old ideas. Historically, blood transfusion technology, organ transplantation, etc. , has brought great ethical controversy, in 1978 when the first test-tube baby was born, caused an uproar, but now, people have been able to treat all this correctly. This shows that the idea of constantly updating in the face of scientific and technological development has not brought disaster to mankind, on the contrary, it has benefited mankind. As far as cloning technology is concerned, "therapeutic cloning" will make a breakthrough in producing transplanted organs and overcoming diseases, and bring revolutionary changes to biotechnology and medical technology. For example, when your daughter needs a bone marrow transplant, no one can provide it for her; When you unfortunately lost a 5-year-old child, you can't get rid of the pain; When you want to raise your own children but can't have children ... maybe you can realize the great scientific value and practical significance of cloning. The research of therapeutic cloning and the experiment of complete human cloning complement and promote each other. The end point of therapeutic cloning is the emergence of complete human cloning. If used properly, they can and should bring good news to human society.
Science has always been a double-edged sword. However, whether a scientific and technological progress is really beneficial to human beings depends on how human beings treat and apply it, rather than choking on it just because it is temporarily unreasonable. Cloning technology may indeed be the same as atomic energy technology, which can not only benefit mankind, but also cause endless harm. But the essence of "fear of technology" is the fear of misuse of technology, not the fear of technology itself. At present, the attitudes of all countries in the world towards human cloning are ambiguous. Last year, Britain passed a bill allowing the cloning of early human embryos with more than two-thirds of the votes, while in the United States, Germany and Australia, voices calling for relaxing restrictions on therapeutic cloning gradually sounded. It can be said that which country has mastered the technology of human cloning first means that it has the advantage and initiative, and the country that started late may suffer unpredictable losses. Just as the United States first mastered atomic energy technology, although this technology showed its evil side from the beginning, later countries had to step up research and experiments in this field. From this point of view alone, it is also worth discussing to adopt a simple negative attitude towards human cloning experiments.
As for people's fear that once the cloning technology is mature, thousands of "Hitler" will be cloned by people with ulterior motives, or another celebrity will be cloned to confuse people, that is a misunderstanding of cloning. The cloned person is only a genetic feature, and the social attributes such as thinking and personality influenced by many factors in the acquired environment cannot be exactly the same, that is, no matter how the cloning technology develops, only the human body can be cloned, but not the human soul, and there is an age gap between the cloned person and the cloned person. Therefore, the so-called human cloning is not a complete copy of human beings, historical figures will not be resurrected, and real people do not have to worry about having another "self".
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