Reviving Extinct Species: RNA Recovered from Tasmanian Tiger for the First Time

TL;DR Summary
Scientists have successfully recovered RNA from an extinct species for the first time, specifically from a thylacine specimen that died in 1936. The researchers extracted and analyzed RNA from the desiccated skin and skeletal muscle tissues of the thylacine, providing insights into its biology and metabolism. While the study's focus was not on de-extinction, the findings could benefit scientific advancements in gene editing, in vitro fertilization, and the analysis of extinct and extant viruses. This breakthrough opens the possibility of recovering RNA from other extinct species in the future.
Topics:science#de-extinction#extinct-species#genetic-research#rna-recovery#science-and-technology#thylacine
- RNA Recovered From an Extinct Species for the First Time Gizmodo
- Recovering RNA from extinct Tasmanian tiger specimen | The World ABC News (Australia)
- In a first, RNA is recovered from extinct Tasmanian tiger Yahoo News
- RNA has been recovered from an extinct species for the first time Phys.org
- Extinct Tasmanian tiger yields RNA secrets that could aid resurrection New Scientist
- View Full Coverage on Google News
Reading Insights
Total Reads
0
Unique Readers
0
Time Saved
3 min
vs 3 min read
Condensed
85%
599 → 89 words
Want the full story? Read the original article
Read on Gizmodo