Putaro wrote:Hmmm...Terra Prime managed to bring a Vulcan-Human hybrid to term, so what did they do that everyone else doesn't understand? i should think that fixing the built-in genetic problems wouldn't make it impossible to gestate another Vulcan-Human hybrid.
Trip as a Human "captured" by Romulans to infiltrate them makes a lot more sense than Trip disguised as a Romulan.
Panysan wrote:Thanks Putaro for your review(s). The organization Terra Prime cloned the DNA of Trip and T'Pol and created a baby. However, the baby got ill and died. Phlox says that it was genetic, her Vulcan and human DNA weren't compatible. So even if you used cloning as a method for a baby, you still have to find a way to cure the genetic problems. Also - as much as TnT loved their cloned daughter - if you have to choose between a cloned child or a child born from the combination of your genes and more of less the normal way, what will you choose? Glad you liked the bit about Trip's motivation for his mission and his capture by the Romulans and thank you for reading all three chapters and reviewing them. :D
Putaro wrote:I see what you're trying to say about the cloning, but here's my understanding of the various processes (ignoring outright nonsense like Lyssarian Desert Larvae - the child woulld only live for two weeks anyhow). To produce a child, you need to combine the genetic material of the parents in some way. One way is through the traditional egg+sperm being combined. Egg and sperm cells are haploid cells - they only carry 23 (half) of your chromosomes, randomly chosen. The fertilization process combines the two to create the full 46 chromosomes a Human has (other species can have different numbers of chromosomes). Whether the fertilization occurs "naturally" or in a petri dish, the process is the same and results in a single cell which will divide and divide and differentiate to grow into a Human being. That cell needs an environment to do that in which currently has to be a mother's womb.
A regular clone is a copy of the parent. The way this has been done today with animals (so there's no reason to believe it wouldn't work for humans) is they start with an egg, remove the half of the chromosomes that are in the egg already and then put the full set of DNA from the parent into the egg. There's a little kick that makes the egg believes it has been fertilized and it is now that single cell we all start from. Theoretically, it should be possilble to take an adult cell and convince it that it's a just-fertilized egg, but we don't know how to do that yet. Again, the cell needs an environment (a womb) to grow in until the creature is self-sufficient.
In Demons, T'Pol referred to Elizabteh as being a "binary clone". A binary clone would start with DNA from the two parents. Rather than starting with sperm and egg cells though (which have already split the chromosomes) you would start with regular cells, remove the DNA and then pick the chromosomes from the parents and combine them. The end result would be a full set of DNA, which you'd then put into an egg to create that initial cell. Again, it needs a womb to be gestated in.
A binary clone would only differ from a naturally produced child in terms of how the genes were selected. It would still contain DNA from both parents and thus be "their" child. It would also need a womb or womb substitute to be gestated in. For Trip and T'Pol to have a child, I believe they would need significant genetic engineering to pick and choose traits and combine them together into a compatible whole (we'll assume that Human and Vulcan DNA are similar enough for this to be possible at all).
That's my understanding of all this - I could be wrong but I think I'm at least pretty close to right.
So, my point was, that since Terra Prime was able to gestate a child from a single cell (as any of the methods require, including cloning), they must have gotten over the hurdle that T'Pol had of her body rejecting the child. Either they had a way to suppress the rejection in the mother, or a Human host mother could carry a Vulcan-Human hybrid to term or they had some kind of artificial womb technology like you described.
Panyasan wrote:Putaro, there is a huge difference between cloning and the method of getting a egg and sperm together (the methode Trip and T'Pol have chosen). Cloning is a exact copy of your DNA, in the case of a binary clone a copy of two persons DNA. With putting the egg and sperm together, an unique person can come to live, because the combination are limitless. That is why two childern of the same parents can be so different. Two binary clones wouldn't. Also a clone is more a copy and that makes the genetic make up much weaker. Diversity in the genes makes the genetic material stronger. What ever method used, you're right that the organization Terra Prime probably used a kind of artifical womb. The facility that is developing this advanced artifical womb would have probably used the same knowlegde and technologies Terra Prime has, but also improved it.
Panyasan, I am sorry, but there is not any difference between the two processes, at least as far as the end result goes.
Cloning typically only refers to an organism created with the same DNA as the parent. "Binary clone" is, as far as I can tell, a term that the Enterprise writers made up for the episode (try Googling it - the only hits you'll get are Memory Alpha) to describe a genetically engineered combination of two donors' DNA. It's not possible to be an identical copy of two people - think about what you're saying. You could be an identical copy of one or the other or you can be combination of the two. That's what the binary clone concept is supposed to be. Genetic engineering of people has been on the horizon for a while. If you were to take the DNA from two Human donors and then pick and choose genes to combine them, the only difference between that and a naturally produced child would be how the genes were selected. In a natural mating, the gene selection is pretty much random, while in a genetically engineered organism the genes would be deliberately picked.
However, you can get a unique combination by a random method or by a deliberate method. This little comment was written deliberately but it is probably unique. Siblings produced by this "binary clone" process could be as identical or as unique as the genetic engineers wanted them to be.
There's nothing inherent in cloning that would make an individual less healthy. It will be, genetically speaking, as healthy or unhealthy as the original - identical twins are, essentially, natural clones because they come from one egg that split into two. Are identical twins less healthy than non-identical siblings? We each consist of trillions of cells, all descended from one single fertilized egg cell, with that original DNA in the egg copied those trillions of times. Telomeres, on the end of the DNA chains in Humans, get shorter as the DNA is copied naturally and are believed to be linked to aging. Somewhere in the egg/sperm production/combination the telomeres get reset, but it's not magic and as part of the cloning/genetic recombination process, telomeres could theoretically be reset as well.
When you look at a race as a group, genetic diversity is, of course, important.