End Time deception

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An American couple were so distraught at the prospect of losing their pet Labrador that they decided to pay £100,000 to clone him.

Edgar and Nina Otto decided to have DNA samples of their pooch Sir Lancelot frozen six years ago, after he was diagnosed with cancer.
After he died last January in 2008, the wealthy pair then paid a biotech firm £108,000 to create Lancelot Encore.

Nina, 66 and Edgar Otto, 79 from Florida with their cloned puppy. Nina is holding a picture of their beloved Sir Lancelot who died in 2008




BioArts International created Lancelot Encore in South Korea, where he was born 10 weeks ago. The Ottos are thrilled and say he's the first single-birth, commercially cloned puppy in the United States.


Lancelot Encore was flown to Miami International Airport, where the Ottos were waiting to greet him.

'I ended up down on the floor with him in the middle of the airport,' laughed Nina, 66.

'He looked just like my original Lancelot. The most interesting thing about this Lancelot we notice he's bonded immediately within an hour with every other pets in the house. He's the Alpha dog!'

'We hope (he's the same as the original),' Ed, 79, added.
'But we do realize if he's different we're not going to love him any less.'



The Ottos already have nine other dogs, 10 cats, six sheep and four parrots on their 12 acres in West Boca, but they insisted Lancelot was special.

'He was a human dog,' Ed said. 'He read your emotions. He knew when to be with you and when to leave you alone.'

BioArts CEO Lou Hawthorne teamed with Dr Hwang Woo-suk, a scientist with South Korea's Sooam Biotech Research Foundation, to produce the dog.

Hwang, a controversial figure, lost his research professorship at Seoul National University in 2004 after fraudulently claiming that he had cloned human embryos and stem cells.

He was, however, involved in creating an Afghan hound clone the next year.

To create Lancelot Encore, Woo-suk took an egg from what Hawthorne called 'an indigenous Korean dog' resembling a bloodhound, replaced the egg's innards with the late Lancelot's DNA, then implanted the egg in a second Korean dog.

Two months later, Lancelot Encore was born, weighing 1lb 3oz. He's now grown to 17lbs, but is still small enough to be tucked into his yellow pet stroller.

The Ottos make no apologies for splashing out so much cash on their new pet, though they said their next dog would come from a shelter.



However, cloning your pet could soon cost less than half the price, a South Korean biotech firm said today.

RNL Bio said it has developed a new method to clone dogs using stem cells derived from fat tissue that greatly increases the likelihood of success.

'If we fully develop this technology, dog cloning will be much easier than now. We can reduce the cost for cloning,' said chief executive Ra Jeongchan.

He said two cloned beagle puppies were born in the past week using this method, which could reduce the cost of cloning a pet dog to about £35,000 within three years.

Canines are considered one of the more difficult mammals to clone because of their reproductive cycle that includes difficult-to-predict ovulations.

Culled From:http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech/article-1131349/Couple-devas...

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