Not exact matches
Pharming is interested in using a potentially
more efficient method called nuclear transfer to
clone cows, because the technique could speed the process of growing herds that reliably produce drugs in their milk.
By day 34 of development, however, the pattern of gene expression was much
more similar to control
cows derived from artificial insemination, suggesting that these surviving
clones were able to implant in the uterus and begin to form a placenta.
But a lot of basic research will be needed before any
cloning attempt, since far
more is known about
cows, sheep, and mice than about canine reproductive biology.