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wvwvw
01-01-2015, 11:36 AM
Russia's Noah's Ark: Moscow State University to cryogenically freeze DNA of EVERY creature that has ever lived
The world's most ambitious DNA bank will be created at Russian University
Its directors aim to freeze biological matter of every creature to have lived
The landmark project has received 1billion rubles (£12.6m) in funding
Nicknamed 'Noah's Ark', it will be used as a 'databank' of cellular materials
By COREY CHARLTON FOR MAILONLINE
PUBLISHED: 09:41 EST, 27 December 2014 | UPDATED: 03:53 EST, 29 December 2014

A Russian university is planning to create a 'Noah's Ark' consisting of the frozen DNA of every creature that has ever lived.

Moscow State University has received the country's largest-ever scientific grant to embark on the project, which is scheduled to be completed by 2018 and will be based in a 430sq km site on campus.

The institute, which has received 1billion rubles (£12.6million) to help get it off the ground, aims to cryogenically freeze and store cells which are capable of reproducing.

Viktor Sadivnichy, the university's rector, likened the gigantic project to a modern-day 'Noah's Ark', RT reported.
He explained: 'It will involve the creation of a depository - a databank for the storing of every living thing on Earth, including not only living, but disappearing and distinct organisms.

'It will also contain information systems. If it's realised, this will be a leap in Russian history as the first nation to create an actual Noah's Ark of sorts.'

The announcement marks the latest, and most ambitious, of the world's DNA banks which have increased in numbers in the past decade following breakthroughs in technology and growing concern about species extinction.
These are known as frozen zoos - the most well known of which is that at San Diego Zoo.

Staff at the research centre have sperm, DNA and other animal matter frozen in liquid nitrogen since 1976. It currently holds about 8,400 samples from over 800 species.

Britain also maintains the Frozen Ark Project, which is run by a consortium of biological societies, zoos, museums and research facilities.
Its website states preserved viable cells will enable biologists to 'reverse the dangerous loss of genetic variation that can cause infertility and early death in breeding programmes'.

It holds a remarkable 28,604 frozen DNA samples, of which more than 7,000 are from species on the 'red list' of endangered animals.

This includes the Spiny Lobster, the Channel Islands Fox, the Bonefish, the Indiana Bat and Cat's Paw Coral.
But Russia's historic Noah's Ark project is not the first of its kind for the country - a storage facility in the remote Siberian wilderness aims to use the natural cold of Siberia's thick permafrost to preserve seed and plant samples for up to 100 years.

At least 1.5million seeds from plants and vegetables will be housed in the cryostorage unit in Yakutsk, protecting many of the world's important foods and endangered plant life against climate change, war, and disaster.

Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2888433/Russia-s-Noah-s-Ark-Moscow-State-University-cryogenically-freeze-DNA-creature-lived.html#ixzz3NZZMgJdf

Furnace
01-01-2015, 11:39 AM
They need to preserve human DNA too, I say Stears' should be the only male specimen frozen down, so that future generations may have a perfect forefather.

Mars06
01-01-2015, 11:39 AM
This is a very important project. The effects of extinctions to come in the following century will be felt by the entire world, and if we have at least this - there is a chance of restoring the world to its natural state.

wvwvw
01-01-2015, 11:53 AM
Meanwhile in USA:

US parents set to be offered experimental genome testing for newborns as study finds 'robust interest' in technology
Four US hospitals looking at different aspects of gene sequencing in newborn babies
Would provide doctors and parents a vast pool of data on potential issues
Could even result in 'genetic passports' for personalised medicine
By MARK PRIGG FOR DAILYMAIL.COM
PUBLISHED: 14:53 EST, 30 December 2014 | UPDATED: 15:29 EST, 30 December 2014

American parents are set to be given the option to have their the genomes of healthy newborn babies sequenced as part of a government-funded research program that could herald a revolution in medicine.

The National Institutes of Health last year awarded a combined $25 million to four projects looking at different aspects of gene sequencing in newborns.

Now, they are set to begin testing for some parents within weeks.
http://i.dailymail.co.uk/i/pix/2014/12/30/1C73BDFD00000578-0-image-a-3_1419968068672.jpg
Testing could even result in 'genetic passports' which could be used years later to help develop personalized medical treatment, such as choosing the most effective asthma medication.

Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech/article-2891662/US-parents-set-offered-experimental-genome-testing-study-finds-robust-technology.html#ixzz3NZdDshCB