A group of researchers are getting closer to bringing the extinct woolly mammoth back to life. Geneticist George Church’s lab at Harvard University successfully copied genes from frozen woolly mammoths and pasted them into the genome of an Asian elephant.
Using a DNA editing tool called CRISPR, 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.
The research has not yet been peer-reviewed or published in a scientific journal “because there is more work to do,” Church told the U.K.’s Sunday Times, “but we plan to do so.”
The work is part of an effort to bring extinct species back from the dead, a process called “de-extinction”. The recent breakthrough shows that one proposed de-extinction method--which involves splicing genes from extinct animals into the genomes of their living relatives--just might work. But don't believe the headlines suggesting woolly mammoth cloning is just around the corner. Church explained to Popular Science that there’s a lot more research to be done.
“Just making a DNA change isn’t that meaningful,” says Church. “We want to read out the phenotypes.” To do that, the team needs to figure out how to take the flat hybrid cells from a petri dish and coax them into becoming specialized tissues--such as blood cells or liver organoids--then test to see if they behave properly. For example, do the mammoth hair genes lead to hair that's the right color, length, and woolliness?
If those tests go well, the team hopes to turn the elephant/mammoth skin cells into hybrid embryos that can be grown in artificial wombs, devices that allow for pregnancies outside of an animal's uterus. Artificial wombs are pretty speculative at this point, but the alternative--implanting the hybrids into the wombs of female elephants--is unsavory to animal rights activists as well as geneticists. “It’s going to be more humane and easier if we can set up hundreds of [embryos] in an incubator and run tests,” says Church.
If they can get the hybrid creatures to survive, the project's first goal will be to engineer an elephant that can survive in cold temperatures. The team thinks that expanding the elephant’s range into colder climates could help keep it away from humans and the conflicts that are threatening to make Asian and African elephants extinct. Later, after the engineered elephants gain a foothold, Church says the team will try to revive the mammoths by integrating higher amounts of mammoth DNA into the hybrids.
Of course, it's possible the mammoth genome will never be completely reconstructed, and the creatures will only remain elephant/mammoth hybrids. But if it looks like a mammoth and fulfills the same ecological functions as a mammoth, is it a mammoth? What even is a mammoth, anyway?

The thought of bringing things back from the dead, it honestly scares me. It'd be amazing to have a wider animal variety, but to have ones that have already passed on roaming the Earth once again? The next thing people will be trying to do is bring back humans who have passed, which don't get me wrong, id love counting the fact of how many people have lost a loved one, but its also a part of life, and by bringing animals back to life, we are taking away their rights of life for our own selfish wants. But at the same time, I'd love to see a mammoth in person, in real life, and see how they would interact with the new world.
ReplyDeleteI think this could eventually lead to other breakthroughs in scientific research. Knowing that scientists are starting to be able to bring extinct organisms could really help us in the long run. I would like to see how the mammoth reacts to the knew world and where would they put the new organism? Its a big step in scientific research and really the world all together.
ReplyDeleteEven if we manage to bring back the DNA of an extinct species, is it still the same species, or a human made replica? There are many movies, TV shows, and books on why NOT to bring the dead back to life. Also, if we just bring extinct species back to life and introduce them into the wild, what effect will they have on the ecosystem, and what would the purpose of evolution serve if we can play God and bring a dead species back to the world?
ReplyDeleteHa ha called it. To be serious though, they died for a reason, why bring them back? Like Chris said, it really wouldn't be like it was. How would it effect the ecosystem? If we just start bringing back species people won't care about preserving the environment and species will start dying off like crabgrass after weed killer
ReplyDeleteI think it would be amazing to see the extinct creature in person. But that sight is not worth risking the life of human being, I haven't gone extremely into thought about it, but i know that if the mammoth came back into the world, a lot of things would change. Right now i feel like the world is overall balanced. But if mammoths come back, not just humans, but all the other organisms will be extremely affected as well is some way shape or form.
ReplyDeleteI think that bringing back the woolly mammoth would be great and all but if we continue to bring back species that we drove to extinction we wont care for our environment and all the species it supports. But other than that I would love to see the woolly mammoth in person and would like to see how it reacts in our modernized environment, and i would like to see if the mammoth would be able to thrive in the environment like it used to.
ReplyDeleteThe wholly mammoth doesn't need to come back to live. Since it died the world changed and it changed to adapt to its extinction, and bringing it back could make the world change again.
ReplyDeleteI think that this has both positive and possible negative effects. On one hand this can be used so that elephants dont become extinct. On the other hand there are many possible negative effect of introducing hybrid elephants into a colder community.
ReplyDeleteI think bringing back the wholly mammoth is a bad idea. Like almost everyone else has said, what about the ecosystem? We've adapted to live without these organisms and bringing them back could ruin it all. Also, what's not to say they won't try the same with humans.
ReplyDeleteSeveral people love the idea of bringing back the wholly mammoth, I however am not one of the people. Wholly mammoths went extinct hundreds and hundreds of years ago.The oldest human today isn't even up to 150 years old. Not a single living human being on this earth has been around to experience a wholly mammoth and how they react and behave. We don't know how dangerous these things can be. Also, these things went extinct once, what is going to stop them from going extinct again?
ReplyDeleteThis reminds me of the frog article. It is just about bringing back the wolly mammoth from extinction. Sure it will change the tundra ecosystem. The question is how worse can it really get? Humans have already destroyed many ecosystems by a variety of ways. I'm on board in bringing back the wolly mammoth from the Ice Ages. The first one should be named Manny.
ReplyDeleteI don't think its a good idea to be bringing back extinct animals. It could have a lot of negative affects on the world and even the human population. This article is a lot like the frog one. Its interesting that we have these abilities, but I don't think its needed.
ReplyDeleteI don't think it's a good idea to bring this animal back. I say this because it has past away hundreds of years ago for a reason. I don't think that they would survive in the environment we have now. They may also mess with our food chain and cause it to go into danger. I also don't see why we need to bring them back.
ReplyDeleteIn my opinion we should not bring back any animals from the dead. They are extinct for a reason. If they couldn't live back then what makes you think they can live now? We barely have room on earth for the animals we have now. So what makes you think me can make room for more.
ReplyDeleteThis is extremely fascinating but if this were successful would the species have the same behaviors as the old kind.And what if the species end up having other characteristics that they weren't supposed to without the scientists that could cause a lot of misunderstanding and people will start to doubt what these scientists were actually trying to do.I would actually love to see this work out b/c it seems really cool.But what if other scientists get the idea to create new species for example a cheetas and sharks that could affect us terrible.
ReplyDeleteI think this could eventually lead to other breakthroughs in scientific research. But not a single living human being on this earth has been around to experience a woolly mammoth and how they react and behave. It could potentially do nothing but make it completely worse. There's not many places for it to live because the polar caps are melting. Plus we've adapted to live without them so it would be usless.
ReplyDeleteI think that the idea of bringing organisms "back to life" is very interesting. This could lead to other fascinating discoveries in scientific experimentation. I believe that scientists should consider the outcome of bringing back the wholly mammoth. This action could be dangerous not only to us humans but also to other living things. It could make survival more difficult. These animals could be violent creatures. Humans have lived without these animals for hundreds of years. Just imagine what could happen after their return. We have learned to live without the wholly mammoth currently. Interaction could be interupted incredibly.
ReplyDeleteI think it's cool that this is even a possibility. It would be good for us if we can bring extinct animals back to life. It would also probably give researchers more information about the animals especially if they were never recorded.
ReplyDeleteI first read about this in National Geographic and I thought this would be really cool. the catch is that with climate change soon there wont be a place for these mammoths to life. We first have to fix the environment before we bring these species back.
ReplyDeleteI think this could be a good and bad thing. It could be good to be able to bring something back that went extinct. It could be bad because maybe it went extinct for a reason and shouldn't be brought back. This could lead to great discoveries, but could also be very harmful for some ecosystems.
ReplyDeleteAs amazing as it sounds I think we'd be better off without the Mammoths because it would be so different, other than it being a hybrid, something like that doesn't belong in a world like this one, what would happen if we were to release it into the wild? All kinds of things could go wrong so would it be worth it just to bring it back? I doubt it, I actually heard about this a while back and thought it was a really good idea at the time when I didn't take all the side effects of it into account. Overall good idea, wrong time.
ReplyDeleteI believe this will not end well if they bring back an animal that has been extinct. Most likely the animal will not be able to adjust to the increasing temperatures and pollution. Recreating the habitat for the animal to survive the new world would be entirely difficult and expensive. In conclusion this would be a complete guessing game if the experiment would work or not and we would be putting a lot of money into something we are so unsure of.
ReplyDelete