@ankipanky138 התכוונתי לזה שהיא לא זכתה לאריכות ימים ויש טענות שהיא הזדקנה בצורה מואצת בצורה תואמת לגיל המקורי של הכבשה ממנה נלקח הדנא https://t.co/8fL5ywlhIY https://t.co/yjXXLZ9L2h
@RealBioSciGuy @ChrisMa06209581 @its_the_Dr Telomers in clones are practically non-existent. They age quickly and die. https://t.co/32CANJWCO5
@Samsulmara @TotalREProperty @lovewuji @MTBrisky @Maiafay376 Depends on the length of his telomeres. If it didn’t change and same DNA, then his reappearance is not a clone. https://t.co/lEZBXVL5uT
Will cloned animals suffer premature aging – The story at the end of clones' chromosomes https://t.co/j1DbNFi7IF
@patriottakes Seeing as clones come with same lifespan as the cloned, thanks to telomeres, yet none of the memories, they'd just be throwing away money for a few years. But these types aren't really big on "science". https://t.co/1C40GeKmC3
@dakenine Also relevant. https://t.co/SxpWuJdNIy Clones inherit their cell host age due to cells already being aged. At least initial clones were born with the cell age of the cell host animal. and thus, died early.
@Probgoblin @batkaren According to the info I’ve found via google, yes. About 15 years ago. https://t.co/igUS8VBmxx