THE Woolly Mammoth is on track to roam the Earth once again by 2028, some 4,000 years after extinction.

It’s all thanks to a Jurassic Park-style project spearheaded by Colossal Biosciences, which is understood to be the world’s first de-extinction company.

The company has discovered the building blocks to de-extinct the great Woolly Mammoth

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The company has discovered the building blocks to de-extinct the great Woolly MammothCredit: Colossal Biosciences
Scientists hope to edit these cells with genes taken from a frozen Woolly Mammoth that has been preserved

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Scientists hope to edit these cells with genes taken from a frozen Woolly Mammoth that has been preservedCredit: PA
Until now, elephant-based stem cells had not been successfully manufactured

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Until now, elephant-based stem cells had not been successfully manufacturedCredit: Colossal Biosciences

Colossal announced it has reached a major milestone in the journey to bring the Woolly Mammoth back to life.

Scientists have had a breakthrough in elephant ‘pluripotent’ stem cells, also known as iPSCs, which can grow into any cell in the body.

They are essentially the building blocks needed to de-extinct the great Woolly Mammoth.

Colossal is also working on bringing back the Tasmanian tiger and the dodo. 

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According to Eriona Hysolli, Head of Biological Sciences at Colossal Biosciences, it’s be a long road to success.

“In the past, a multitude of attempts to generate elephant iPSCs have not been fruitful,” Hysolli said in the announcement.

“Elephants are a very special species, and we have only just begun to scratch the surface of their fundamental biology.

“The Colossal mammoth team persisted quite successfully as this progress is invaluable for the future of elephant assisted reproductive technologies, as well as advanced cellular modeling of mammoth phenotypes.” 

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Scientists hope to edit these cells with genes taken from a frozen Woolly Mammoth that has been preserved.

But these new cells also have a lot of potential for studying cell development, cell therapy, drug screening, and synthetic embryos.

Scientist Shinya Yamanaka paved the way for this project in 2006 when he discovered how to turn animal cells into stem cells, first in mice and then in big cats and rhinos.

But until now, elephant-based stem cells had not been successfully manufactured.

‘Hardest to re-programme’

Colossal co-founder and Harvard geneticist Dr. George Church noted that while Elephants might win the “hardest to re-programme prize”, the discovery will help other endangered species.

The milestone can offer insight into the developmental biology of other animals, and even how cancer develops in different species, says Dr Church.

He added: “It opens the door for obtaining gametes and other cell types without surgery on precious animals.

“It opens the door to establishing connections between genes and traits for both modern and extinct relatives – including resistance to environmental extremes and pathogens. 

“This collaboration has been a true pleasure and a colossal accelerant for our challenging project.”

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If successful, the company wants to reintroduce Woolly Mammoth’s the Arctic tundra habitat.

It will also bring a much-needed boost to dwindling Asian elephant populations, that are near areas with dense human populations.

Dr George Church says that creating elephant-mammoth hybrids will help conserve the elephant by letting it extend its range and help repair damaged arctic ecosystems

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Dr George Church says that creating elephant-mammoth hybrids will help conserve the elephant by letting it extend its range and help repair damaged arctic ecosystemsCredit: Christopher P. Michel

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This post first appeared on Thesun.co.uk

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