Science The Science Behind the Return of the Dire Wolf

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Nature gave the world the dire wolf 2.6 million years ago, and then, through the hard hand of extinction, took it away—some 10,000 to 13,000 years ago when the last of the species died out. Now, the dire wolf is back, brought bounding into the 21st century by Colossal Biosciences, a Dallas-based biotech company. On April 8, Colossal announced it had used both cloning and gene-editing based on two ancient samples of dire wolf DNA to birth three pups, the six-month-old males Romulus and Remus and the two-month-old female Khaleesi.

“Our team took DNA from a 13,000 year old tooth and a 72,000 year old skull and made healthy dire wolf puppies,” said Colossal CEO Ben Lamm in a statement that accompanied the announcement of the births. “It was once said, ‘any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic.’ Today, our team gets to unveil some of the magic they are working on.

So what, exactly, does that work involve?

Traditional cloning—the kind that famously resulted in Dolly the sheep in 1996, and has since been used to create clones of pigs, cats, deer, horses, mice, goats, gray wolves, dogs and more—is a relatively straightforward, if invasive, process. First, a single cell is taken from a tissue sample of the animal to be cloned. That cell’s nucleus—which contains the individual’s entire genetic code—is then extracted and inserted into a donor ovum from the same species whose own nucleus has been removed. The ovum carrying the new genetic material is allowed to develop into an embryo and then transferred into the womb of a surrogate, which ultimately gives birth to an exact duplicate of the animal from which the donor cell was taken.

Colossal says its dire wolf work had key differences. Scientists first analyzed the genome of the dire wolves contained in the ancient tooth and skull. Comparing those genomes to that of the gray wolf—the dire wolf’s closest living relative—they identified 20 differences in 14 genes that account for the dire wolf’s distinguishing characteristics, including its greater size, white coat, wider head, larger teeth, more powerful shoulders, more-muscular legs, and characteristic vocalizations, especially howling and whining.

Next, they harvested endothelial progenitor cells (EPCs), which form the lining of bloodvessels, from the bloodstreams of living gray wolves—a less invasive procedure than taking a tissue sample—and edited the 14 genes in their nuclei to express those 20 dire wolf traits. This is trickier than it seems, since genes often have multiple effects, not all of them good. For example, as the company explains in its press release, the dire wolf has three genes that code for its light coat, but in gray wolves they can lead to deafness and blindness. The Colossal team thus engineered two other genes that shut down black and red pigmentation, leading to the dire wolf’s characteristic light color without causing any harm in the edited gray wolf genome.

Once this was finished, the edited nuclei were next extracted from the cells and inserted into denucleated gray wolf ova. The ova were left to grow into embryos and 45 were transferred into the wombs of two domestic hound mixes. One embryo in each surrogate mother took hold, and after 65 days of gestation, Rolulus and Remus were born. A few months later, the procedure was repeated with a third surrogate who ultimately gave birth to Khaleesi. All three births were conducted by scheduled cesarean section to minimize the chances of injury during delivery. No surrogate dogs had a miscarriage or stillbirth during the process.

Colossal plans to use similar techniques to bring back the Ice Age woolly mammoth in 2028, editing living cell nuclei from Asian elephants—the mammoth’s closest living kin—to express mammoth traits preserved in nearly 60 sets of Ice Age remains. In early March, the company announced that it had successfully tested its methods in laboratory mice, producing 38 woolly mouse pups which bear the mammoth’s signature shaggy coat. Now it says it’s on track to have a surrogate elephant pregnancy in 2026 (elephants take nearly two years to gestate).

Other work in Colossal’s labs involves not bringing back extinct animals but attempting to save endangered ones. Endangered species can suffer from several issues, including a lack of genetic diversity—known as a “genetic bottleneck.” The relatively few animals left repeatedly mate with one another, and the inbreeding results in birth defects, sterility, and health problems proliferating through the species. Colossal has targeted some species with these problems, and is working to genetically edit more diversity into their populations.

One such project involves the all-but vanished pink pigeon. The pink pigeon species is indigenous to the island nation of Mauritius and once thrived there, until it lost its habitat as more and more of the island was given over to sugar plantations. Humanity’s introduction of rats and cats—which attack pigeon nests—drove the bird’s numbers down to just ten individuals. With the help of captive breeding programs, more than 650 pigeons were hatched and raised and released back on Mauritius. But with so few birds from which the captive population was bred, the species is experiencing high levels of infertility because of the genetic bottleneck.

To get around that, the scientists first tap into the fertilized egg of a pink pigeon and extract what are known as primordial germ cells (PGCs)—the cells that eventually become sperm and egg. In the lab, scientists then genetically edit the PGC genome to introduce greater genetic diversity—though at the moment Colossal is still studying the pink pigeon alleles and doesn’t yet know what traits that more-diverse coding will produce. Then, using the fertilized egg of a common chicken—which is far more plentiful than a pink pigeon egg—they inject the PGCs into the embryo. Once there, the cells travel to the gonads and create an embryo that, after it hatches, grows, and reaches sexual maturity, will produce not chicken chicks, but pigeon chicks. Eventually, those pigeons would be released into the wild population, producing genetically diverse young and helping to fortify the species.

None of this is easy and none of it comes cheap—though with a valuation of $10.2 billion, Colossal has the resources to pursue the science without too much concern about the price. And the company is not going it alone. It is partnering with conservation organizations such the American Wolf Foundation, The Mauritian Wildlife Foundation, Save the Elephants, and Conservation Nation. The company worked with the indigenous MHA Nation tribes (Mandan, Hidatsa, and Arikara) on the dire wolf project, and the tribes have expressed a desire to have dire wolves live on their lands in North Dakota. Colossal also says it's in advanced negotiations with the government of North Carolina to use its conservation strategies to help strengthen the endangered red wolf population there.

The company also believes that the new EPC cloning technique will allow them to save blood samples of existing species in a biobank as a hedge against their ever becoming endangered in the future. Romulus, Remus, and Khaleesi, the most conspicuous of the animals to emerge from Colossal’s labs, will surely not be the last.

https://time.com/7275439/science-behind-dire-wolf-return/ (Archive)

 
btw putting these in the wild would either consign them to a swift death, or they would run wild and fuck up the ecosystem. Either they'd be maladapted and die pretty quick, or they'd dominate. It's pure retard to think that you can introduce an animal that would be an apex predator into a new environment and it wouldn't severely disrupt things. These "dire wolves," almost twice as large as regular wolves, would put huge stress on prey populations and would be unchallengeable except by humans and, I guess, brown or polar bears - and I wouldn't put it past a pack of ~150 pound "dire wolves" to be able to successfully fuck up all but the largest of bears with some consistency
 
Aren't dire wolves in genus Aenocyon, not Canis? It's a cool bit of gene editing, but these aren't "real" dire wolves, just bigger than normal greys. There's no actual dire wolf DNA involved, just modified grey wolf DNA.
Yeah but if they just said they genetically modified a wolf to be bigger and have white fur they couldn't justify the billions of dollars they get to fuck around with.
 
Both the Japanese and Hokkaido wolf species have been extinct since the early 20th Century. Although the Japanese wolf is almost back at 99% wolf, 1% dog mix. Which is where the Japanese scientist(s) have gotten too with their own program.
They're not extinct lol. We found them. There just aren't a lot of them. Sure it's only once instance and a photograph and a recorded wolf howl, but they're out there. I'm 1000% convinced we as a species have gotten worse at navigating the woods over the past 100 years though. So finding them again, ain't gonna happen.
 
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btw putting these in the wild would either consign them to a swift death, or they would run wild and fuck up the ecosystem. Either they'd be maladapted and die pretty quick, or they'd dominate. It's pure retard to think that you can introduce an animal that would be an apex predator into a new environment and it wouldn't severely disrupt things. These "dire wolves," almost twice as large as regular wolves, would put huge stress on prey populations and would be unchallengeable except by humans and, I guess, brown or polar bears - and I wouldn't put it past a pack of ~150 pound "dire wolves" to be able to successfully fuck up all but the largest of bears with some consistency

I think they would wipe out polar bears to be honest. To big of a threat to their hunting grounds and while they might not want to take on an adult I cant really see how a single mature bear would protect its cub/Cubs from a pack.

Odds are they would kill off the young till extinction.
 
These "dire wolves," almost twice as large as regular wolves, would put huge stress on prey populations and would be unchallengeable except by humans and, I guess, brown or polar bears - and I wouldn't put it past a pack of ~150 pound "dire wolves" to be able to successfully fuck up all but the largest of bears with some consistency
They'd annihilate the ecosystem outright. What North American animals are taking on 150lbs anything aside from Grizzly Bears? It'd be an absolute slaughter. They'd go out, find a pack, get challenged, laugh off the Alpha, and then breed endlessly without challenge. It'd happen a lot faster than you think too. 150lb anything with a pack mentality isn't being out gunned by anything. They'd be pretty uncontrollable. All they need to do is start breeding once or twice and we'd have a horrifically difficult time controlling them. Once they're done tearing through an ecosystem, then they'd simply migrate. Considering how much we suck at containing these kids, not a bright idea to keep these things around.
 
They're not extinct lol. We found them. There just aren't a lot of them. Sure it's only once instance and a photograph and a recorded wolf howl, but they're out there. I'm 1000% convinced we as a species have gotten worse at navigating the woods over the past 100 years though. So finding them again, ain't gonna happen.
Got a source on that?
 
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Aren't dire wolves in genus Aenocyon, not Canis? It's a cool bit of gene editing, but these aren't "real" dire wolves, just bigger than normal greys. There's no actual dire wolf DNA involved, just modified grey wolf DNA.
Spot on. Jackals and other modern canids are closer to modern wolves than dire wolves are.

They are an approximation of a dire wolf, with genes edited to give them a comparable phenotype.

Ancient DNA is not well known for being high quality, so any genome assembled from it is very likely to be gappy or inaccurate, I don't personally buy that the company has an accurate dire wolf genome. Even if they had edited or produced molecules of the entire genome, it would very likely have some errors (though nobody would know for sure).

In an interview their spokesperson essentially said "if you go by phylogeny, then they are not die wolves, however if you consider the morphology then they are". Unfortunately, that's not how it works and speciation is not based on morphology in any kingdom of life.

It's still extremely impressive work, but the PR surrounding it is more than a little dishonest. We will likely never truly bring any animals back from extinction due to complex factors like mitochondrial DNA and epigenetics.
 
So they're retards then. Got it


Careful. Give it time and we'd be seeing truck of peace attacks replaced with a triceratops of peace attack, with muslim jihadists riding them into public markets waving a scimitar hacking at people
No no, i got a better idea
Airdrop em into the fucking sentinelese islands

See how cavemen would have dealt with dinosaurs. Or see a tribe of niggers get torn apart. Either will be very entertaining!
 
The company worked with the indigenous MHA Nation tribes (Mandan, Hidatsa, and Arikara) on the dire wolf project, and the tribes have expressed a desire to have dire wolves live on their lands in North Dakota.
Oh nevermind, they want them to roam free and mix with local populations. These people are retarded. Don't fuck with nature.

Got a source on that?
It's 2025. Google Man finds Japanese wolf. It's an old story.
 
Majestic doggos, I wish them well.

I really want them to bring back the mammoth, the Siberian unicorn and the thylacine. And the dodo.
Imagine elasmotherium jousting.
Or retaking the country like Hannibal crossing the alps except it’s the M25 and you’ve got an armoured mammoth herd.
I'd also like to see smilodons brought back.
 
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