A monkey has been successfully cloned by Chinese scientists and, in a world first, has so far lived for two years.
Researchers have cloned primates before using the same method which created Dolly the Sheep in 1996 but none have ever lived for very long, either dying before birth or shortly afterwards.
However, a modified technique designed to create a stronger placenta has seen a rhesus monkey be cloned, be born and live healthily for more than two years, making it the longest-lived primate clone yet.
Only one birth was successful, however, from a total of 113 attempts. And the animal has been labelled “ReTro”.
The process, called somatic cell nuclear transfer (SCNT), involves extracting the genetic information from a standard cell and implanting it into an egg from another monkey that has had its own genetic material sucked out.
The placing of chromosomes from a body cell into a vacant egg, which acts like a donor, is the same process used to create Dolly the Sheep.
Dogs, cattle, mice and goats are among the other species to be cloned using this process but in primates, it has proven hard to do, with a success rate as low as 1 per cent.