De-extinction of Dire Wolf by Colossal Biosciences

Colossal Biosciences, a US-based genomics and biotechnology firm, announced genetic recreation of dire wolves (Aenocyon dirus)—a species that went extinct nearly 13,000 years ago. This marks a major step in the emerging field of de-extinction science, where extinct species are recreated using gene editing and cloning technologies.

Company Involved: Colossal Biosciences (USA)

Species Revived: Dire Wolf (Aenocyon dirus)

About Dire Wolves

Existed until ~13,000 years ago (Late Pleistocene)

Habitat: Southern Canada and United States

Diet: Horses, bison, possibly mammoths

Appearance:

  • Larger than modern grey wolves (Canis lupus)
  • Up to 3.5 feet tall, 6 feet in length, and 68 kg in weight
  • White coat, strong musculature

Cause of Extinction: Likely due to prey loss & human hunting

The De-extinction Process

Source of DNA:

  • A 13,000-year-old tooth
  • A 72,000-year-old skull (inner ear bone – petrous – preserved DNA well)

Genetic Findings:

  • Dire wolf shares 99.5% DNA with grey wolf
  • Grey wolf confirmed as closest living relative

Gene Editing:

  • 20 edits made to 14 genes
  • Traits edited: Light-colored coat, hair length, musculature, body size, patterning
  • Technology: CRISPR genome editing

Embryo Creation & Cloning:

  • Engineered grey wolf cells to carry dire wolf traits
  • Cloned embryos implanted into surrogate dogs
  • 3 pups born: Named Romulus, Remus, and Khaleesi

Scientific Achievement:

  • Claimed creation of the world’s first successfully de-extincted animal
  • Achieved through CRISPR gene editing, cloning, and ancient DNA sequencing

Criticism:

  • Experts argue Romulus, Remus, and Khaleesi are symbolic successes of biotech ( these are genetically modified dogs), but not genetically pure dire wolves
  • Critics say it’s genetic recreation, not true de-extinction

Hybrid Genome:

  • The outcome is a hybrid organism, not a 100% accurate resurrection of the extinct species

Conservation Implications

Ethical Concerns:

  • Some conservationists fear de-extinction might reduce interest in preserving endangered species

Red Wolf Cloning:

  • Technologies from this project used to clone critically endangered red wolves
  • Developed less invasive cloning methods

Positive Outlook:

  • Colossal sees de-extinction tech as a conservation tool for other threatened species

Key Facts: The first de-extincted animal was the bucardo, a mountain goat from Pyrenees (Europe) — brought back to life briefly before dying again

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