";s:4:"text";s:5791:" In a side-effect, the cloned cats glow in the dark when exposed to ultraviolet beams. I've always read that cat blood glows in the dark, something I've always wanted to see. And even though I have two wild and rambunctious cats, I've never seen fresh blood besides that crusty stuff in their ears from excessive scratching. Doesn't mean you shouldn't feeA cloned Turkish Angola kitten, left, gives off a red fluorescence glow while an ordinary one appears to be green in this picture taken under ultraviolet light at a laboratory of Gyeongsang National University in Jinju, South Gyeongsang Province, Wednesday. This just looks like a hoax to me.The red cat is either a rather good photoshoping, or the real deal. They've got a show on right now where men can fly by sticking out their arms and wearing a poorly-tailored leather duster.There's a difference between suspension of disbelief (if you are referencing Heros - something that could be explained by being understanding of our current science), not-supposed to be technical (if you are referencing Dresden files - face it, that's magic), redundancy by trying to sound like you know something you don't (the Eureka quote), and campy plots (most scifi)I'm guessing the GP was talking about Flash Gordon, which probably pushes this into category four, campy.Well, kitties are so close they practically have "nuclear bonds", anyway...Now they have food-lit dinner instead of candle lit dinner?Those images do not look like images representative of cloned GFP containing animals that I have seen. I can get sharks with laser beams on their heads. South Korean scientists have cloned cats that produce RFP (Red Fluorescent Protein). That wouldn't qualify as 'glow in the dark' since they dont make their own light.Of the two cats, I particularly like the red one. If the cat were being lit by an external source, the fur would reflect the light. The only place that the fur would be thick enough to block it completely would be the body imho.Don't forget that an external UV light is required, rather than the skin glowing all by itself.
The images of these animals are amazing. Three such cats were cloned, and two of the Turkish Angoras have survived to adulthood. Comments owned by the poster. No, U haz florescence, which is something else entirely. The cat on the right *is* a normal cat imaged through a green light filter as claimed.The green one is NOT glowing and it even says it's an ordinary cat that's simply reflecting the green light. But the fur appears to be blocking the light.You really call that image "amazing"? She really likes pink. Cats must be incredibly resilient not even considering their ability to fall from great heights.Next of course, artists are going to have to create cloned animals with other bizarre characteristics. The latter is transmissive and the former is refective. I wouldn't rush - that cat can be behind a skunk, raccoon, even a deer or a moose and those are still plain boring non-glowing type.Now maybe I won't trip over them as I stumble around in the dark, on my way to the bathroom in the middle of the night.I don't know if the light socket would work. A team of scientists led by Kong Il-keun, a cloning expert at Gyeongsang National University, produced three cats possessing altered fluorescence protein (RFP) genes, the Ministry of Science and Technology said. I'll have a piece of that. And one that doesn't shed, get rid of the shedding gene. The slower time scales of the re-emission are associated with "forbidden" energy state transitions in quantum mechanics.Does that mean I can finally get a goldfish night light?Well, a friend of mine, a Japanese scientist here at the UW, she did make a glow in the dark worm, with a biochemical switch that was fairly easy to activate, so having a glow in the dark goldfish night light isn't that difficult.This is for research only, so U can see if a protein is expressed by attaching a UV marker to it. Likewise, biomod, GOOD. But the fur appears to be blocking the light.The red cat is either a rather good photoshoping, or the real deal. Short of computer manipulation. Hardly.
Shall we say, evens? Maybe by saying color I hurt the feelings of the Fluorescent Americats.That made me think of a Eureka quote that made me want to do violent things to their writers...Just try and watch that show and find a single line that doesn't make you cringe. This discussion has been archived.
Then life will My GF died her cat purple years ago. It just looks like a green light on the right and a narrow beamed red light on the left, perhaps on a black haired cat that would absorb the red light. Let's clone 250 extremely deformed ones before we get 1 right. Our fuzzy diseased friends have been getting us sick for a long, long time. We'll call him Rudolph.An experiment done by Korean scientists, it must be true!Yes, they run a little-known custom Ubuntu release...Fluorescent Feline.At least these ones will be less likely to get run over by cars at night!If you cat shits on my lava lamp, you will see how cats fly.But if the luminous cat sits at night staring at the luminous fish, I'll stay away from all the light!But in Soviet Russia, genetically modified glowing overlords welcome you!Trademarks property of their respective owners. Fire, GOOD. I can't imagine she would catch any if she glows. Scifi's been doing really poorly lately. eldavojohn writes "Well, you can finally get genetically modified cloned animals.South Korean scientists have shown it is possible to alter a protein via therapeutic cloning to 'artificially [create] animals with human illnesses linked to genetic causes.' The cats glow in the dark when exposed to ultraviolet rays! ";s:7:"keyword";s:28:"cloned cat glows in the dark";s:5:"links";s:477:"Map Of Spain- Majorca- Ibiza,
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