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XI'AN, June 22 (Xinhuanet) -- Yangyang, a female goat
cloned from an adult by Chinese scientists in 2000, celebrated her fourth
birthday on Tuesday.
 (Photo:
CRIENGLISH.com/biosino.org)
She is full grown, healthy and has no sign of
premature senility, a complication that zoologists say might affect cloned
mammals, according to scientists with the sheep-breeding base of the China
Science and Technology University for Agriculture and Forestry in Xi'an, capital
of northwest China's Shaanxi Province.
Yangyang is now the happy great-grandmother in a
four-generation family. She is living with her daughter, three-year-oldQingqing,
granddaughter Tiantian, 16 months old, and great-granddaughter Xiaoxiao who was
born on Feb. 6 this year.
"Her booming family prove goats cloned from somatic
cells and embryos can cross-fertilize and reproduce in the same way as ordinary
goats," said Zhang Yong, an expert on animal embryo engineering who cloned
Yangyang.
Yangyang was the second goat cloned from somatic
cells at the base. The first one, Yuanyuan, also a female, died from respiratory
failure stemming from undeveloped lungs 36 hours aftershe was born.
Over 1 million people from all walks of life have
visited Yangyang at the base over the past four years.
Scientists at the base are closely watching
Yangyang's overall condition. "It's still too early to say whether she might
suffer from premature senility or other complications later on," said Prof.
Zhang Yong.
Dolly the sheep, the world's first mammal cloned from
an adult,died an early death last year after being diagnosed with progressive
lung disease. Dolly was six, while sheep can normally live to 11 or 12 years.
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