Cat Lovers: Is anyone else uncomfortable with this?

Tina

Tagless and bitter about it
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Aug 20, 1999
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Genetically Engineered Cats For Sale

(CNN) -- A California biotechnology company has started taking orders for a hypoallergenic cat for pet lovers prone to allergies.

The genetically engineered feline, which is expected to be available from 2007, is the first in a planned series of lifestyle pets, Los Angeles-based Allerca said in a press release.

Allerca hopes to attract customers among the millions of people worldwide who suffer from cat allergies.

Up to 10 percent of the U.S. population alone are believed to be prone to symptoms that can affect the eyes, nose, ears, throat, lungs and skin.

Many cat lovers ignore medical advice and discomfort and choose to keep the animals as pets, or use expensive medications to cope with their allergies.

Cat allergen is also one of the main causes of childhood allergies, asthma and other respiratory diseases such as bronchitis.

Cat allergies are caused by a potent protein secreted by the cat's skin and salivary glands. The allergen is so small it can remain airborne for months.

Using "gene silencing" technology, Allerca is able to suppress the production of the protein.

The first breed of hypoallergenic cats will be British Shorthairs, which are considered to be ideal pets with friendly, playful and affectionate personalities.

Allerca expects the first kittens to be born in early 2007 and is already accepting $250 deposits from interested customers.

Allerca president Simon Brodie told The Associated Press that he ultimately hopes to sell 200,000 of the cats annually at $3,500 each in the United States.

Brodie said the cats would be spayed and neutered to prevent breeding with naturally born animals.

He also said he didn't expect to have any problems with federal regulators after neither the U.S. Department of Agriculture nor the Food and Drug Administration objected to the creation of a genetically-engineered pet fish because it wasn't meant for human consumption

The GloFish, which went on sale in pet stores earlier this year, is a zebra fish implanted with a fluorescent sea anemone gene.

"As long as people don't start eating cats and they don't enter the food chain, then we should be handled like the GloFish," Brodie told the AP.

The genetic-engineered cat is the latest attempt to apply biotechnology to the lucrative pet industry.

In August, Genetic Savings & Clone -- another Californian company -- announced that it had successfully cloned two kittens from a one-year-old female Bengal cat and said it could clone anyone's pet for around $50,000.
 
Yes. Very.

While I do feel for people with allergies, there are far too many cats and kittens out there without homes who need to be adopted. The last thing we need to be doing is creating even more. And we really do not need to be cloning cats.
 
Yes. Exactly what E said. Let's get the kitties that are already here and homeless somewhere to live.
 

Oh. I have a really sweet kitty, named Delilah, that I would like to clone.
 
I have a dog whom I adore, but when his life on this earth is over, I will be going to the rescue to get another dog. I would much rather give another dog a chance at life than clone my pet.

I think that is what my dog would want to, if he could have a say. ::yes::
 
Originally posted by EsmeraldaX
I have a dog whom I adore, but when his life on this earth is over, I will be going to the rescue to get another dog. I would much rather give another dog a chance at life than clone my pet.

I think that is what my dog would want to, if he could have a say. ::yes::

I think so too.:D

My DH wishes he could stuff our older cat when he dies. He thinks it would make it less painful if he could still see him around. I think he's :crazy:
 
The thing that they can not guarantee is personality. I have a cat, Rocky, who is the coolest cat around. Everyone that meets him wants to take him. If he were cloned, you would end up with a cat that looks JUSt like him, but might not act like him.

On the other hand, cloning and gene splicing fascinates me. I think the GloFish are pretty cool.

Ted
 
I agree with esmarelada. On the other hand, people with severe allergies will not be out adopting other pets and reducing the need for these kitties to be adopted. As a cat lover, I think I would die if I could not have at least one of these snuggly bugglies in my home at all times due to allergies.

My kitty's name is cowboy and he is the sweetest best kitty in the whole wide world. He is starting to be friends with my 2 year old DD who has learned to control her grabbing impulse. He often sleeps on her bed now and that makes me happy. :D
 
Aren't there already breeds of cats that are basically hairless, or have extremely short hair, and would therefore be suitable for allergy prone people?

I'm allergic to cats, but I still have 4 of them :)
 
Actually, when you clone a cat you are not even guaranteed to get a cat that looks anything like the original. Genetics is turning out to be way more complex than we even imagined.

On the other hand, farmers and breeders have been selecting traits for animals and plants for thousands of years, so what makes this much different than purebred dogs and cats or "new" breeds that are come up by selectively breeding generations of animals to come up with one that is pure in certain traits? People pay tons of money for animals that look a certain way or are of a certain size or are supposed to have certain personality traits, what's wrong with paying money for a breed that won't make you sick?

I also don't find the argument that there are lots of other animals out there for adoption to be compelling... for people who are highly allergic the choice is not between existing animals and the new breed but rather between being able to have a pet or being able to live... a friend of mine has severe asthma and although she loves cats, her one night spent in a house with them sent her to the hospital.
 
Ok, this is just my opinion...I do not like the cloning idea because as was already stated, you can not guarentee personality (only looks). Now about the other issue...since people with allergies can not adopt the cats we already have that need families, then why shouldn't they be able to have the utter pleasure of cat ownership? Maybe they have more severe allergies and can not suffer with a regular cat. They said they were going to spay/nueter them so that they won't be able to produce offspring, so I do not see a problem. I understand that people want others to support their local shelters. I admit I bought my german shepherd. Is he any less important as a loving pet simply because he came from a breeder and not the pound?
 
I don't have any problem with this. My sister loves my female cat, but she is allergic to her:( She ended up getting a Bichon puppy as a pet because that is supposed to be a hypoallergenic dog breed. She can't consider a cat at all because of her allergies.

On the subject of cloning, I'd totally clone my female cat if I could be guaranteed of getting a clone just like her. Of course, that would about send DH over the edge, LOL! She is one active, loving attention-seeker:rolleyes: :p
 
There already are cats out there who people with allergies can adopt, just ask Rajah! There are also Rex's with little or no hair.

I would clone my oldest in a second if I could get a kitty just like her.
 
Yes, I'm very uncomfortable with this. I think its disgusting.

I don't object to genetic manipulation in cases such as a deffective human heart but this is just... wrong. Very very wrong.
 
im not cloning my cat, she drives me nuts now, let alone another 1 of her.

she may want me cloned,i am her personal servant.i was put on this earth to serve her and take care of her every whim.

maybe sometime today she will get out of my computer chair so i dont have to type leaning over it.

im to the point,if i go to buy new furniture i should take her along. its not like im ever going to get to use it, might as well get something she likes.

i used to have a great lazy-boy chair, all broke in,my butt imprint all formed.
now it has her butt imprint.
 
Yup.

Especially when there *are* breeds out there that are "hypoallergenic" and totally natural.
 
GaryAdams, I feel your pain. We bought a glider rocker this weekend. Clearly I'm never going to get to try it out.

<img src=http://members.sparedollar.com/nonsibi92/PhoebesChair2.jpg>
 
Originally posted by Lisa F
Actually, when you clone a cat you are not even guaranteed to get a cat that looks anything like the original. Genetics is turning out to be way more complex than we even imagined.

Excellent point1 i had forgotten that bit of info. Coloration and patterning is NOT going to come out identical with a clone. I believe one of the recent closing of kittens showed us this.

Ted
 
Anyone who is part of a successful breeding program will tell you that to "engineer" one trait into a breed, the consequence is that others will be magnified (or lost) because you are working from the same gene pool.
Let's use Dalmations, for example. (nothing wrong with them--just an example).
Dalmations are bred for their spots (their looks). That means that temperment and behaviors are not high priority, so you get a beautiful looking dog, but with many potential problems.

I wonder what generation 2, 3, 4, etc. of these cats will show?
:earsgirl: :earsboy: :earsboy: :earsgirl:
 


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