Part, Chapter, Paragraph
1 I, 1,1 | have settled on the use of pigs as a potential source animals
2 I, 2,2 | production of transgenic pigs expressing hDAF might provide
3 I, 2,2 | produced such transgenic pigs and have demonstrated that
4 I, 2,2 | demonstrated that organs from these pigs usually do not undergo hyperacute
5 I, 2,2 | transgenic hDAF-expressing pigs, it appears that hyperacute
6 I, 2,2 | expression of "a-gal" from pigs by knocking out the 1,3
7 I, 2,2(18)| generation of transgenic pigs as potential organ donors
8 I, 2,2(18)| xenografts from triple-transgenic pigs are not hyperacutely rejected
9 I, 2,2(18)| transfer: production of pigs transgenic for a human regulator
10 I, 2,2 | yet been accomplished in pigs, although present-day cloning
11 I, 2,3 | today remains transgenic pigs expressing hDAF (32) and,
12 I, 2,3 | the second is to produce pigs that express additional
13 I, 2,4 | measures include the birth of pigs by hysterotomy (caesarean
14 I, 2,4 | and routine monitoring of pigs and their handlers. These
15 I, 2,4 | which causes no pathology in pigs but which may cause disease
16 I, 2,4 | other mammalian species, pigs have sequences in their
17 I, 2,4(41)| endogenous retrovirus of pigs. Nature Med 3: 282-286. ~
18 I, 2,4 | Certainly, the elimination from pigs of all PERV, which represents
19 I, 2,5 | to producing transgenic pigs that express human genes
20 I, 2,5 | have led to the cloning of pigs,(43) allowing for simple
21 I, 2,5(43)| Vaught T.D., et al., Cloned pigs produced by nuclear transfer
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