Because this is the last day before the start of the spring break, the cloning dialog setting is a small university biology class where only three out of 20 students come to class. The names of the three students are Andy, Kristen, Eric. In the classroom, only three students were seen, and the professor changed the lecture material to a class discussion including scientific progress in the field of recent cloning. During the discussion, the professor explained how to create a sheep clone named Dolly.
Dolly is a case of reproductive cloning aimed at creating descendants. Reproductive cloning and cloning are used for therapy and research, sometimes referred to as "therapeutic cloning". Reproductive cloning and cloning for research and treatment both involve SCNT, but their goals and their ethical issues are largely different. First we will discuss clones for research and treatment and then continue to explain the outline of ethical debate surrounding reproductive cloning.
Two common theoretical human clonal types are therapeutic cloning and reproductive cloning. Therapeutic cloning involves the use of human cloned cells for medicine and transplantation and is an active area of research, but by 2014 there was no medical practice anywhere in the world. Two commonly used therapeutic cloning methods under investigation are somatic cell nuclear transfer, and recent pluripotent stem cell induction. Reproductive cloning involves the creation of specific cells and tissues as well as whole clones.
Human cloning is divided into two broad categories: reproductive cloning, human embryo generation using cloning techniques, preparation of complete human and therapeutic agents. Reproductive cloning requires somatic cells, eggs without DNA, and surrogacy mothers; as a result, new individuals with the same genome or genetic code are born. - Clon Ethics My clone, a junior high school student and a Catholic guy, is right or wrong: The right to use therapeutic stem cells for adult and reproductive clone errors. Reproductive cloning is the fusion of cells from donor to cells by electrofusion and the cells are removed and become embryos. The clone has the same gene as the donor. Biological, religious and moral issues are emerging