Retention of epigenetic memory in blastocysts and loss of epigenetic memory in NT-ES cell lines. The outcome of postimplantation development depends strictly on the origin of the donor nucleus. Fertilized blastocysts develop into normal mice with high efficiency, whereas blastocysts derived after nuclear transplantation from donor cells, such as ES cells, fibroblasts, immune cells, or neurons, develop into abnormal mice with an efficiency that depends on the differentiation status of the respective donor nucleus (, ). For example, cloned blastocysts derived from ES cell donor nuclei develop to birth with high efficiency, whereas those derived from fibroblasts, immune cells or neurons develop to birth with low or very low efficiency. In contrast to postimplantation development, the process of deriving embryonic stem cells entails rigorous selection for in vitro proliferation and results in the loss of the epigenetic memory of the donor nucleus.