A biotechnology company wants to resuscitate the dodo, after the mammoth and the Tasmanian wolf

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No one really knows what the dodo looked like. Quite simply because the extinction of the The hooded raphusthe scholarly name of this bird belonging to the order Columbiformes, dates back to 1690, according to the scientific journal Nature. Twenty-eight years after its last confirmed sighting, in 1662, and reported by Volkert Evertsz, a Dutch sailor from the Arnhem, ship stranded on an islet off the coast of Mauritius. Of the bird, only a few bones remain today, at the Natural History Museum in Paris, London, Oxford University or the Cantonal Geology Museum in Lausanne…

Read also: Should we resurrect extinct species?

Not content with wanting to create woolly mammoth hybrids or resurrect the thylacine (also called marsupial wolf or Tasmanian wolf), the biotechnology and genetic engineering company Colossal Biosciences has set out to revive the dodo. Or at least, a version identical to the fictional character appearing in the Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland (1865) by Lewis Carroll and Walt Disney’s cartoon (1951).

To do this, the firm has just raised 150 million dollars (about 137.5 million euros). By early 2022, Colossal had already raised $75 million from various investors, including the United States Innovative Technology Fund, Breyer Capital or In-Q-Tel, the CIA’s venture capital firm. Biotech is now valued at some 1.5 billion dollars: enough to help it develop its projects.

Researching the Closest Living Relative of the Dodo

“The dodo is a symbol of human-caused extinction”, explained to the Associated Press Ben Lamm, co-founder and CEO of Colossal, a division of which works specifically on genetic technologies related to birds. Bringing the dodo back to life will bring nothing to the company, he assures. But this research could have other applications in the field of human health. Colossal is notably developing tools to simultaneously modify several parts of the genome and is working on an “artificial uterus” for its mammoth.

Read also: Article reserved for our subscribers The dodo, “pop star” revealed by its bones

To carry out its project, Colossal is interested in the closest living relative of the dodo: the nicobar with camail, also called nicobar pigeon. Molecular biologist and Colossal Scientific Advisory Board member Beth Shapiro has been studying the dodo since the early 2000s. She spent years searching for its DNA and eventually found some in a specimen held at the Museum of Natural History in Copenhagen. .

With her team, she will now study the DNA differences between the nicobar pigeon and the dodo. Objective: to understand “what are the genes that really make a dodo a dodo”. Researchers can then attempt to modify nicobar-camail cells to make them look like dodo cells using the Crispr-CAS9 genome editing technique.

It is possible to put the modified cells into developing eggs of other birds, such as pigeons or chickens, to create offspring which can in turn naturally produce dodo eggs, explains the researcher. But she warns: “It is not possible to recreate a 100% identical copy of something that has disappeared. » In fact, animals are the product of their genome and their environment, and the latter has changed dramatically since the 1600s.

Read also: Creating woolly mammoth hybrids to combat the effects of climate change

It is cheaper to prevent species from disappearing

Still, the prospect of resurrecting extinct species is not unanimous in the scientific community. Several researchers interviewed by the Associated Press expressed their skepticism about this possible “disextinction”. “Preventing species from becoming extinct should be our priority. And in most cases it’s much cheaper”notes Boris Worm, biologist at Dalhousie University in Halifax (Nova Scotia, Canada).

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“There’s a real danger in saying that if we destroy nature, we can just put it back – because we can’t”, insists, for his part, Stuart Pimm of Duke University, in North Carolina (United States). And the latter to raise a much more prosaic question: “Where the hell would you put a woolly mammoth, other than in a cage?” » The ecosystems where mammoths lived are long gone. Like that of the dodos. For its project, Colossal intends to partner with the authorities of Mauritius, which have succeeded in reintroducing the giant Aldabra tortoise on the small islands.

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