Gordon L. Woods

American equine reproduction specialist
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Quick Facts
Born:
July 14, 1952, Idaho, U.S.
Died:
Aug. 20, 2009, Loveland, Colo. (aged 57)
Subjects Of Study:
horse
cloning
reproduction

Gordon L. Woods (born July 14, 1952, Idaho, U.S.—died Aug. 20, 2009, Loveland, Colo.) was an American equine reproduction specialist who led research efforts resulting in the generation of the first equine clone—a mule named Idaho Gem, born in 2003. Woods also was known for his pioneering research into the use of equines as models for better understanding of human disease.

Woods received a bachelor’s degree from the University of Idaho and in 1975 earned a doctorate in veterinary medicine from Colorado State University (CSU). Following a brief stint (1978–79) as a practitioner at a veterinary clinic, Woods attended the University of Pennsylvania, where he completed a residency in large animal reproduction. He subsequently earned master’s and doctoral degrees in reproductive biology from the University of Wisconsin. In 1983 Woods joined the New York State College of Veterinary Medicine at Cornell University, having obtained an assistant professorship there. In 1986 he returned to the University of Idaho, where he established the Northwest Equine Reproduction Laboratory, the facility that would prove central to his later research on equine cloning and comparative physiology of equines and humans. In 1989 he accepted a position as a professor in the university’s department of animal and veterinary science.

In 1998 Woods founded CancEr2, a company specializing in the investigation of the biological processes underlying equine and human cancers. That same year, Woods and American animal scientists Kenneth L. White and Dirk Vanderwall set to work on attempts at cloning a member of the horse family. They employed a technique known as nuclear transfer, in which a cell’s nucleus is removed and inserted into an enucleated egg cell (an egg cell that has had its own nucleus removed). In the experiments that led to Idaho Gem, the researchers extracted a nucleus from a donor mule cell and transferred it to an enucleated egg from a horse. The egg was then transplanted into the oviduct of a mare. After several hundred attempts, a viable male mule foal, Idaho Gem, was born on May 4, 2003. The success of Idaho Gem was followed that same year by the births of mule clones Utah Pioneer and Idaho Star. Both Idaho Gem, which was cloned from a sibling of a champion racing mule, and Idaho Star went on to enjoy fruitful racing careers.

Woods served as president of the companies EquinE2, which commercialized technologies for horse reproduction, and ClonE2, which offered commercial services for horse cloning. In 2007 Woods transferred his laboratory to CSU, where he joined the faculty of the Animal Reproduction and Biotechnology Laboratory and was a professor in the department of biomedical sciences.

Kara Rogers