Plaque to honour Dolly the sheep, the world’s first cloned mammal, to be erected in Edinburgh

Posted: Published on February 24th, 2015

This post was added by Dr P. Richardson

The first mammal to be cloned from an adult cell, she was born in 1996 and died in 2003.

On Wednesday a blue plaque celebrating Dolly and the team who created her will be unveiled by the Society of Biology at The Roslin Institute, University of Edinburgh, where she was created.

It is one of a new series of 10 celebratory plaques being unveiled by the Society of Biology across the UK to celebrate eminent but sometimes unsung heroes of the science.

Others being honoured include IVF pioneers Patrick Steptoe, Robert Edwards and Jean Purdy, Richard Owen, who invented the word "dinosaur", and Dorothy Hodgkin, who discovered the structure of penicillin.

Sir Ian Wilmut, from the University of Edinburgh and lead researcher on the Dolly project, will give a speech at the unveiling ceremony.

He said: "The birth of Dolly, the first clone of an adult animal, revolutionised our understanding of the mechanisms that regulate development.

"We used to believe that once a cell had differentiated to a specific tissue type it could not be changed. The birth of Dolly showed that this is not the case.

"This result stimulated research which is now providing revolutionary opportunities in medicine."

Dr William Ritchie, from Roslin Embryology, who worked with Sir Ian on the Dolly project, said: "To make the Dolly experiments successful, many people were involved, from lab technicians to the farm staff caring for the animals to the surgeons and anaesthetists whose skills successfully transferred the embryos.

"All the people who gave their skills, effort and dedication to these experiments are immensely proud of the contributions which they made."

Continued here:
Plaque to honour Dolly the sheep, the world's first cloned mammal, to be erected in Edinburgh

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