The GFP cat: From Figure 2 of Wongsrikeao et al. |
Well, that didn't take long. I blogged last month about a paper describing GFP beagles that were able to glow under the control of a tetracycline promotor. Now, a new Nature Methods paper describes a GFP cat! The basic point of the paper (here's the abstract) was to demonstrate gamate-targeted transgenesis in cats and to use this ability to make a transgenic feline model for HIV research. The HIV part was interesting, as they introduced the gene for a protein from the rhesus macaque known as TRIM5. I studied TRIM5 pretty extensively when I was doing HIV research as it is a species-specific restriction factor that is effective at stopping HIV replication. Cats don't have an analogous TRIM protein (that we know of) so by introducing this protein into the cat, researchers can study the transmission of FIV (the cat version of HIV).
The cool part was the GFP expression. Wongsrikeao et al. wanted to see if they could introduce multiple genes, and since GFP is a convenient marker, they could also study the presence of the transgenes in progeny cats. As I mentioned in the Beagle post, fluorescent proteins have been introduced in animals previously (see here and here for cats) but the efficiency in the present work is better. I'm certainly no expert on transgenics, but the general trend over the last few years is clear... we are moving from the realm of the nearly impossible to the land of the challenging but doable. Glowing cats, dogs, hamsters, bunnies, you name it are going to be popping up in your pet store relatively soon. Lost your dog? No problem... just look for the glowing blob in the woods. How about a government program to develop a GFP opossum? Think of how much road kill would be eliminated if you could see these animals before they got up close and personal with your tire. Think about how cool the forest would be if all of the little woodland creatures glowed bright green. Think about how easy it would be to hunt. I wonder how screwed up the food chain would get. I guess we would have to make GFP plants for the little GFP bunnies to hide in. Man, this would make a really cool dystopian/biopunk story!
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