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                    <title>Phys.org news tagged with:dolly the sheep</title>
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                    <title>For the first time, a donor mouse has been cloned using a drop of peripheral blood from its tail</title>
                    <description>From obesity to substance abuse, from anxiety to cancer, genetically modified mice are used extensively in research as models of human disease. Researchers often spend years developing a strain of mouse with the exact genetic mutations necessary to model a particular human disorder. But what if that mouse, due to the mutations themselves or a simple twist of fate, was infertile?</description>
                    <link>https://phys.org/news/2013-06-donor-mouse-cloned-peripheral-blood.html</link>
                    <category>Biotechnology</category>                    <pubDate>Wed, 26 Jun 2013 15:04:10 EDT</pubDate>
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                    <title>Researchers succeed in making generations of mouse clones</title>
                    <description>Using the technique that created Dolly the sheep, researchers from the RIKEN Center for Developmental Biology in Kobe, Japan have identified a way to produce healthy mouse clones that live a normal lifespan and can be sequentially cloned indefinitely.</description>
                    <link>https://phys.org/news/2013-03-mouse-clones.html</link>
                    <category>Biotechnology</category>                    <pubDate>Thu, 07 Mar 2013 13:01:55 EST</pubDate>
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                    <title>Fertility doctor says he&#039;s on the brink of cloning human: report</title>
                    <description> A US-based fertility doctor claimed to have cloned 14 human embryos and transferred 11 of them into the wombs of four women in an interview published Wednesday.</description>
                    <link>https://phys.org/news/2009-04-fertility-doctor-brink-cloning-human.html</link>
                    <category>Biotechnology</category>                    <pubDate>Wed, 22 Apr 2009 09:04:39 EDT</pubDate>
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                    <title>Dubai claims world&#039;s first cloned camel</title>
                    <description>The United Arab Emirates on Tuesday claimed its own version of Dolly the sheep, the world&#039;s first cloned mammal, after the birth of a cloned camel in Dubai this month.</description>
                    <link>https://phys.org/news/2009-04-dubai-world-cloned-camel.html</link>
                    <category>Biotechnology</category>                    <pubDate>Tue, 14 Apr 2009 05:44:19 EDT</pubDate>
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