John Gurdon is a controversial British biologist.
In 1962, Gurdon, of Oxford University, announced that he had used the nucleus of fully differentiated adult intestinal cells to clone South African frogs. Gurdon's results electrified the scientific community, but some scientists remained skeptical and began to find flaws in his work.
British developmental biologist John Gurdon began cloning experiments using nonembryonic cells—specifically, cells from the intestinal lining of tadpoles. Gurdon believed that the tadpoles were old enough so that cells taken from them would be differentiated. Gurdon exposed a frog egg to ultraviolet light, which destroyed its nucleus. He then removed the nucleus from the tadpole intestinal cell and implanted it in the enucleated egg. The egg grew into a tadpole that was genetically identical to the DNA-donating tadpole.
But the tadpoles cloned in Gurdon’s experiments never survived to adulthood and scientists now believe that many of the cells used in these experiments may not have been differentiated cells after all. Nevertheless, Gurdon’s experiments captured the attention of the scientific community and the tools and techniques he developed for nuclear transfer are still used today. The term clone (from the Greek word klōn, meaning “twig”) had already been in use since the beginning of the 20th century in reference to plants. In 1963 the British biologist J. B. S. Haldane, in describing Gurdon’s results, became one of the first to use the word clone in reference to animals.