Abstract

Agricultural utilization of cloned livestock produced by nuclear transfer and their products for food will require public and governmental acceptance. A series of studies of properties of meat derived from cloned cattle was carried out to collect data for the safety assessment of cloned cattle products. Meat samples obtained from embryonic cloned, somatic cloned and non-cloned cattle were analyzed for chemical composition, as well as amino acids and fatty acids. Digestibility, allergenicity, and mutagenicity of meat were also examined. There were no significant differences in these properties among embryonic cloned, somatic cloned and non-cloned cattle. The analyses and tests revealed that there were no significant biological differences in meat from a non-cloned, an embryonic cloned, or a somatic cloned animal. A 14-week feeding trial in rats showed there were no abnormalities in body growth, general condition, locomotor activity, reflexes, sexual cycle, urinalysis, hematology, blood biochemistry, and histology. This study showed for the first time that the biological/biochemical properties of meat of cloned cattle are similar to those of non-cloned cattle.

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