what is biotechnology?
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What is Biotechnology?. Dolly and surrogate Mom. Embryonic stem cells and gene therapy. Genetically modified rice. Fourteen month-old genetically engineered (“biotech”) salmon (left) and standard salmon (right). Biotechnology. - PowerPoint PPT PresentationTRANSCRIPT
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What is Biotechnology?
Dolly and surrogate Mom
Genetically modified rice.
Embryonic stem cells and gene therapy
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Biotechnology
Biotechnology, defined broadly, is the engineering of organisms for useful purposes.
Often, biotechnology involves the creation of hybrid genes and their introduction into organisms in which some or all of the gene is not normally present.
Fourteen month-old genetically engineered (“biotech”) salmon (left) and standard salmon (right).
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Biotechnology
We’ll examine:
Animal cloning
Gene cloning for pharmaceutical production
The promise and perhaps perils of embryonic stem cells
DNA fingerprinting
Genetically modified foods and the American-European opinion divide.
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Animal Cloning
Dolly and her surrogate mother.
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Why Clone Animals?
To answer questions of basic biology
Five genetically identical cloned pigs.
For herd improvement. To satisfy our desires (e.g. pet cloning).
For pharmaceutical production.
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Is Animal Cloning Ethical?
The first cloned horse and her surrogate mother/genetic twin.
As with many important questions, the answer is beyond the scope of science.
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USU’s Contribution – A Cloned Mule and the First Cloned Equine
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The Biotechnology of Reproductive Cloning
Even under the best of circumstances, the current technology of cloning is very inefficient.
Cloning provides the most direct demonstration that all cells of an individual share a common genetic blueprint.
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Saved by Cloning?
Some are firm believers while many view these approaches to be more of a stunt.
Note the use of a closely related species, a domestic goat, as egg donor and surrogate mother.
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(Science (2002) 295:1443)
Carbon Copy– the First Cloned Pet
Significantly, Carbon Copy is not a phenotypic carbon copy of the animal she was cloned from.
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The Next Step?
Highly unlikely.
Attempts at human cloning are viewed very unfavorably in the scientific community.
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Recombinant DNA, Gene Cloning, and Pharmaceutical Production
DNA can be cut at specific sequences using restriction enzymes.
This creates DNA fragments useful for gene cloning.
These are mature and widely utilized biotechnologies.
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Restriction Enzymes are Enzymes That Cut DNA Only at Particular Sequences
The enzyme EcoRI cutting DNA at its recognition sequence
Different restriction enzymes have different recognition sequences.
This makes it possible to create a wide variety of different gene fragments.
Restriction enzyme animation
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DNAs Cut by a Restriction Enzyme Can be Joined Together in New Ways
These are recombinant DNAs and they often are made of DNAs from different organisms.
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Plasmids are Used to Replicate a Recombinant DNA
Plasmids are small circles of DNA found in bacteria.
Plasmids replicate independently of the bacterial chromosome.
Replication often produces 50-100 copies of a recombinant plasmid in each cell.
Pieces of foreign DNA can be added within a plasmid to create a recombinant plasmid.
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Harnessing the Power of Recombinant DNA Technology – Human Insulin Production by Bacteria
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Human Insulin Production by Bacteria
6) join the plasmid and human fragment
and cut with a restriction enzyme
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Human Insulin Production by Bacteria
Mix the recombinant plasmid with bacteria.
Screening bacterial cells to learn which contain the human insulin gene is the hard part.
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Route to the Production by Bacteria of Human Insulin
A fermentor used to grow recombinant bacteria.
This is the step when gene cloning takes place.
The single recombinant plasmid replicates within a cell.
Then the single cell with many recombinant plasmids produces trillions of like cells with recombinant plasmid – and the human insulin gene.
One cell with the recombinant plasmid
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Route to the Production by Bacteria of Human Insulin
The final steps are to collect the bacteria, break open the cells, and purify the insulin protein expressed from the recombinant human insulin gene.
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Route to the Production by Bacteria of Human Insulin
Overview of gene cloning.
Cloning animation
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Pharming
These goats contain the human gene for a clot-dissolving protein that is produced in their milk.
Pharming is the production of pharmaceuticals in animals engineered to contain a foreign, drug-producing gene.
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The Promise and Possible Perils of Stem Cells
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The Stem Cell Concept
A stem cell is an undifferentiated, dividing cell that gives rise to a daughter cell like itself and a daughter cell that becomes a specialized cell type.
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Stem Cells are Found in the Adult, but the Most Promising Types of Stem Cells for Therapy are Embryonic Stem Cells
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The Inner Cell Mass is the Source of Embryonic Stem Cells
The embryo is destroyed by separating it into individual cells for the collection of ICM cells.
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Some Thorny Ethical Questions
Is it ethical to harvest embryonic stem cells from the “extra” embryos created during in vitro fertilization?
Are these masses of cells a human?
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Additional Potential Dilemmas – Therapeutic Cloning to Obtain Matched Embryonic Stem Cells
Cells from any source other than you or an identical twin present the problem of rejection.
If so, how can matched embryonic stem cells be obtained?
A cloned embryo of a person can be made, and embryonic stem cells harvested from these clones.
Cultured mouse embryonic stem cells.
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Therapeutic Cloning
Is there any ethical difference between therapeutic and reproductive cloning?
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DNA, the Law, and Many Other Applications – The Technology of DNA Fingerprinting
A DNA fingerprint used in a murder case.
What are we looking at? How was it produced?
The defendant stated that the blood on his clothing was his.
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DNA Fingerprinting Basics
Different individuals carry different alleles.
Most alleles useful for DNA fingerprinting differ on the basis of the number of repetitive DNA sequences they contain.
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DNA Fingerprinting Basics
If DNA is cut with a restriction enzyme that recognizes sites on either side of the region that varies, DNA fragments of different sizes will be produced.
A DNA fingerprint is made by analyzing the sizes of DNA fragments produced from a number of different sites in the genome that vary in length.
The more common the length variation at a particular site and the greater the number the sites analyzed, the more informative the fingerprint.
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A Site With Three Alleles Useful for DNA Fingerprinting
DNA fragments of different size will be produced by a restriction enzyme that cuts at the points shown by the arrows.
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The DNA Fragments Are Separated on the Basis of Size
The technique is gel electrophoresis.
The pattern of DNA bands is compared between each sample loaded on the gel.
Gel electrophoresis animation
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Possible Patterns for a Single “Gene” With Three Alleles
In a standard DNA fingerprint, about a dozen sites are analyzed, with each site having many possible alleles.
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A DNA Fingerprint
When many genes are analyzed, each with many different alleles, the chance that two patterns match by coincidence is vanishingly small.
DNA detective animation
HGP fingerprinting page
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DNA and the Law
SLT 3/8/05
Some applications of DNA fingerprinting in the justice system.
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Genetically Modified Foods
Many of our crops in the US are genetically modified.
Should they be?
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GM Crops are Here Today
Source: Pew Initiative on Food and Biotechnology, August 2004.
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Methods for Plant Genetic Engineering are Well-Developed and Similar to Those for Animals
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Golden Rice is Modified to be Provide a Dietary Source of Vitamin A
Worldwide, 7% of children suffer vitamin A deficiency, many of them living in regions in which rice is a staple of the diet.
Golden rice (yellow) with standard rice (white).
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Genetically Modified Crops
Genetically Modified Cotton (contains a bacterial gene for pest resistance)
Standard Cotton
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GMOs, Especially Outside the US, Are a Divisive Issue
Protesters at the 2000 Montreal World Trade Summit
European sentiment
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Current Concerns by Scientists Focus on Environmental, Not Health, Effects of GM Crops
The jury’s still out on the magnitude of GM crop’s ecological impact, but the question is debated seriously.
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Current Concerns by Scientists Focus on Environmental, Not Health, Effects of GM Crops