PDA

View Full Version : Got Milk?



Liagala
06-21-2011, 04:17 PM
http://www.cbsnews.com/8301-504763_162-20071923-10391704.html

(CBS) Human breast milk from a cow? Udderly ridiculous, right? In fact, scientists in China and Argentina have cloned cows that produce milk that's chemically similar to mother's own.


Can they also clone the cows to say "ba ba" instead of "moo?"

Chinese scientists genetically produced a herd of 300 of these human milk-producing cows, and are excited by their early findings.


"The genetically modified cow milk is 80 percent the same as human breast milk," lead researcher Dr. Li Ning, professor at China Agricultural University, told Reuters.


Ning said the milk contains many of the same proteins and antibodies humans need, including lysozome - a protein found in human breast milk but not in ordinary cow's milk. The researchers hope one day to commercially produce the milk.


But the Chinese scientists are not alone. Scientists in Argentina recently cloned a cow by adding two human genes to bovine DNA, The Telegraph reported - and they hope the cow's milk is an even closer match to humans, since the cloned cows in China have only one human gene. The Argintinean scientists said in a written statement that they hope their discovery will prove to be "a development of great importance for the nutrition of infants."

Is the milk safe?

Scientists need to test the stuff on humans, but early pig studies conducted at the University of California at Davis suggest that it may be even more healthful than cow's milk. The scientists inserted a human gene into goats so that their milk contains lysozyme, Life's Little Mysteries reported. When they fed it to pigs suffering from diarrhea, the pigs got better.


"By feeding the transgenic goat milk to baby pigs, which serve as a model for humans, we can see the impact of what the milk might do to humans." Dr. Elizabeth Maga, professor of animal science at UC Davis, told Life's Little Mysteries.

But some moms think the clone-happy scientists are being a bit bull-headed.


A Chinese mother who gave her name only as Lu told Reuters that she didn't know "what might happen if my daughter consumes genetically modified things," adding, "I think natural products are much better."


Read more: http://www.cbsnews.com/8301-504763_162-20071923-10391704.html#ixzz1PwZcVYNW

WRoss
06-21-2011, 04:30 PM
I'd be more interested in a woman that produces pasteurized cow milk from her breasts. Sex and my daily dose of dairy all in one!

PS. Someone posted this same thread months ago but I'm too lazy to find it.

Liagala
06-21-2011, 04:35 PM
Shows how much I pay attention. I just saw it now.

WRoss
06-21-2011, 04:38 PM
It is pretty neat. I believe China has already implemented some of the Human-cow milk to feed orphanages. I wonder how cost effective this is compared to our government paying for formula with Welfare.

Showal
06-21-2011, 05:47 PM
Wow. 80% similar to human breast milk. I wish we could find something as good as human milk that was readily available for cheap to most babies.

bigjerseydreamer
06-21-2011, 05:51 PM
Great topic.

If the cows are immunized with human vaccines (or given injections of human viruses / antibodies) could they will pass on immunity through the milk? (this currently happens between mothers and their children during normal breastfeeding)

Showal
06-21-2011, 08:25 PM
Great topic.

If the cows are immunized with human vaccines (or given injections of human viruses / antibodies) could they will pass on immunity through the milk? (this currently happens between mothers and their children during normal breastfeeding)

good question but not all antibodies pass through breast milk. These also only provide short periods of immune support. I believe it is only IgA that does. IgA is short lived meaning the cows would need constant exposure. Antibodies are also specific, which is ok for a mother who is exposed to similar things that the baby would be, but keeping cows exposed constantly to the same things the child is would most likely be unfeasable. That's if cows even make IgA which they likely do, but not all humans do. I don't know enough about cows to say but most mammals are remarkably similar.

My comment was sort of a joke, as the best milk for a child is the milk their mother produces, which is free. I know this is not available for all children but for the ones that it is, this will probably encourage behavior similar to using formula. Breastfeeding provides a number of benefits to the mother such as oxytocin release which strengthens the maternal bond and many other things.

Cephalopod
06-21-2011, 08:45 PM
How does this impact the hypno-lactation market of bondage slaves?

Showal
06-21-2011, 09:58 PM
How does this impact the hypno-lactation market of bondage slaves?

An even better question! Let's ask Queen Squiggles

phantasm
06-21-2011, 11:25 PM
Eeeeeeeeeaat!
http://www.babble.com/CS/blogs/strollerderby/2009/04/BreastisBestor.jpg

Stanley Burrell
06-21-2011, 11:36 PM
I have repeatedly petitioned the local governing bodies to mandate that cows wear clothing.

Sincerely,

- David Thompson. Charlotte, NC.