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An Ecological Perspective (BIOL 346) Talk one: Biological Ethics
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Page 1: An Ecological Perspective (BIOL 346) Talk one: Biological Ethics.

An Ecological Perspective (BIOL 346)

Talk one:Biological Ethics

Page 2: An Ecological Perspective (BIOL 346) Talk one: Biological Ethics.

Perspective on What, exactly?

• Identify the structure, function, and processes of ecosystems – the physical environment and biological community of

which human society is a part and on which it depends.

• The environmental problems Humans have created.

• What natural resource challenges are being addressed by the social, legal, economic, political, cultural, and religious systems within societies.

• And, of course, the concept of Sustainability– What? Why? How? Ethical issues involved!

Page 3: An Ecological Perspective (BIOL 346) Talk one: Biological Ethics.

Ethics• Ethics:

– also known as moral philosophy, is a branch of philosophy that involves systematizing, defending, and recommending concepts of right and wrong conduct.

• Most people confuse ethics with behaving in accordance with social conventions, religious beliefs, and the law, and don't treat ethics as a stand-alone concept.

• Ethics can be defined as "a set of concepts and principles that guide us in determining what behavior helps or harms sentient creatures.”– Paul, Richard; Elder, Linda (2006). The Miniature Guide

to Understanding the Foundations of Ethical Reasoning. 

Page 4: An Ecological Perspective (BIOL 346) Talk one: Biological Ethics.

Bioethics• The study of controversial ethics brought about

by advances in biology and medicine.

• Bioethicists are concerned with the ethical questions that arise in the relationships among: – Life

sciences, biotechnology, medicine, politics, law, and philosophy.

• It also includes the study of the more commonplace questions of values ("the ethics of the ordinary") that arise in primary care and other branches of medicine.

Page 5: An Ecological Perspective (BIOL 346) Talk one: Biological Ethics.

Bioethics• Also needs to address emerging biotechnologies

that affect basic biology and future humans.

• These developments include:–  cloning, gene therapy, human genetic

engineering, astro-ethics and life in space, and manipulation of basic biology through altered DNA, and proteins.

• Correspondingly, new bioethics also need to address life at its core. – For example, biotic ethics value life itself and seek to

propagate it. • With such life-centered principles, ethics may secure a

cosmological future for life.

Page 6: An Ecological Perspective (BIOL 346) Talk one: Biological Ethics.

Geoethics• Deals with the way of human thinking and

acting in relation to the significance of the Earth as a system and as a model.

• Scientific, technological, methodological and social-cultural aspects are included, e.g.: – Sustainability and development.– geo-diversity and geo-heritage.– prudent consumption of mineral resources.– appropriate measures for predictability and

mitigation of natural hazards.– geoscience communication.

Page 7: An Ecological Perspective (BIOL 346) Talk one: Biological Ethics.

Ethics• So:• Concepts of right and wrong conduct are clearly very

important for:– Any scientific study– Addressing and implementing policies of change:

• In an ideal world these ethical concepts would have, and continue to, guide us as our understanding of science increased.

• OOOPS!!!!!!!!!!!!

Page 8: An Ecological Perspective (BIOL 346) Talk one: Biological Ethics.

Scientific theories• Animals, plants, and bacteria are examples of living systems

that share many properties distinguishing them from nonliving things. These properties are branched into theories.

Cellular organizationFundamental unit of life is the cell – all living things

are made up of cells.Metabolism

Living things take up energy-rich materials and give out waste to environment. Some energy fuels life processes some accumulates and is released after death.Selective response

Living things respond selectively to stimulation in the environment. Organisms recognize certain chemicals as nutrients while ignoring others.

Page 9: An Ecological Perspective (BIOL 346) Talk one: Biological Ethics.

Scientific theoriesHomeostasis

Living systems have some capacity to change harmful conditions into conditions more favorable to their continuing existence – the conversion of chemical compounds.Growth and biosynthesis

Living systems go through phases during which they make more of their own material. Genetic material

Living systems contain genetic material (DNA and RNA) to allow inherited traits.Reproduction

Living systems can reproduce & pass on genetic material.Population structure

Organism form populations. Of these organism capable of sexual processes, a population is all those organisms that can interbreed with one another.

Page 10: An Ecological Perspective (BIOL 346) Talk one: Biological Ethics.

Paradigms• A paradigm is much more than a theory

– It includes a strong belief in the truth of one or more theories and shared opinions as to what problems are important and unimportant

– What techniques and research methods are useful

• Over time a paradigm shift occurs– Better technologies and scientific instruments lead

scientists to look and old data in a different way– Younger scientists look at old data in a new way– In this way ideas and definitions of theories alter

over time an new data is collected and explained.

Page 11: An Ecological Perspective (BIOL 346) Talk one: Biological Ethics.

Paradigm Shifts• OLD PARADIGM• Natural Theology, Lamarckism, and

several other competing paradigms• Blending inheritance and various

folk ideas• Various beliefs: bad humors, bad air

or water, evil spirits, and many others

• Competing paradigms, including Darwinism, mutationism, population

• genetics, neo-Lamarckism• Classical Mendelian genetics• Various theories of territorial

behavior, sexual behavior, etc.; also• psychological theories (gestalt,

behaviorism, ethology)• Descartes’ mechanistic theories and

dualism• Classic germ theory: pathogenicity

as a characteristic of pathogen only

NEW PARADIGMDarwinism (since 1859)Classical Mendelian genetics (since 1865 or 1900)Germ theory of disease (Pasteur, Koch, since 1880)

Modern evolutionary theory (since 1940)

Molecular genetics (since 1950s)

Sociobiology (since 1975)

Mind–body connections (since 1980s)

Pathogenicity as an interaction of pathogen and host (since 1990s)

Page 12: An Ecological Perspective (BIOL 346) Talk one: Biological Ethics.

Science has Improved our Lives!

• Antibiotics--Penicillin, others?• Vaccines--Polio, Measles, Smallpox,

others?• Cell Biology--Cancer Research, others?• Genetics--Basis for Disease, others?• Physics--Electricity!, others?• Engineering--Roads, Bridges, Buildings,

Planes, Trains, Bikes, others?• Fermentation--Civilization!

Page 13: An Ecological Perspective (BIOL 346) Talk one: Biological Ethics.

Science has also opened up “Pandora’s Box”

• Bio-warfare-, Anthrax letters, Current worries?

• Nuclear Weapons--Does North Korea really have them?

• Genome--Insurance issues, Selecting offspring?

• Others?

Page 14: An Ecological Perspective (BIOL 346) Talk one: Biological Ethics.

Ethical thinking• Ethics is a discipline

dealing with the analysis of moral rule and the ways in which moral judgments are made and justified.

• Would you park your car in this space?

• Why?

Page 15: An Ecological Perspective (BIOL 346) Talk one: Biological Ethics.

Ethical thinking• What benefits could

come from nuclear power?

• At what cost?

• At what risk?

• Remember Chernobyl?

Page 16: An Ecological Perspective (BIOL 346) Talk one: Biological Ethics.

Chernobyl Nuclear Disaster • April 26, 1986 in the Ukraine,

• It is regarded as the worst accident in the history of nuclear power.

• A plume of radioactive fallout drifted over parts of the western Soviet Union, Eastern and Western Europe, Scandinavia, the British Isles, and eastern North America. Large areas of Ukraine, Belarus, and Russia were badly contaminated

• Resulted in the evacuation and resettlement of over 336,000 people. About 60% of the radioactive fallout landed in Belarus, according to official post-Soviet data

Page 17: An Ecological Perspective (BIOL 346) Talk one: Biological Ethics.

Chernobyl Nuclear Disaster• Two hundred people were

hospitalized immediately, of whom 31 died (28 of them died from acute radiation exposure).

• Most of these were fire and rescue workers trying to bring the accident

under control

• At least 8,000 people have died, most from radiation-related diseases.

• About 2,000 people have been diagnosed with thyroid cancer and between 8,000 and 10,000 cases are expected to develop over the next 10 years.

Page 18: An Ecological Perspective (BIOL 346) Talk one: Biological Ethics.

Chernobyl Nuclear Disaster

Page 19: An Ecological Perspective (BIOL 346) Talk one: Biological Ethics.

Rights• Do animals have rights?

• Nearly all new drugs, cosmetics, food additives, new forms of surgery are tested on animals first

• Many societies have historically denied even the most basic of rights to classes of persons on the basis of economics, gender, race, ethnicity, or religious beliefs

Page 20: An Ecological Perspective (BIOL 346) Talk one: Biological Ethics.

Experiments without consent

• Humans as experimental subjects

• Experiments on twins

• Bone, muscle, and nerve transplantation experiments

• Head injury experiments

• Freezing experiments

• Malaria experiments

• High Altitude and pressure experiments

Page 21: An Ecological Perspective (BIOL 346) Talk one: Biological Ethics.

Experiments without consent

• 1932 The Tuskegee Syphilis Study begins.

• 200 African-American men infected with syphilis are never told of their illness, are denied treatment, and instead are used as human guinea pigs in order to follow the progression and symptoms of the disease.

• 95% all subsequently die from syphilis, their families never told that they could have been treated.

• Voluntary informed consent– Both a moral and legal issue

• As there are lawyers under every rock!

Charlie Pollard

Herman Shaw

Page 22: An Ecological Perspective (BIOL 346) Talk one: Biological Ethics.

Thalidomide• Gender bias

– What happens if this is not considered

– It was only in 1992 that women were included in medical trials of new drugs by law!

• Thalidomide (Kevadon®)– Developed as a morning

sickness drug in the 1950s– BUT – never tested on

women

• Led to a generation of deformities

Page 23: An Ecological Perspective (BIOL 346) Talk one: Biological Ethics.

Thalidomide – how did it affect DNA?

DNA structure:• Composed of 4

nucleotide bases, 5 carbon sugar and phosphate.

• Base pair = rungs of a ladder.

• Edges = sugar-phosphate backbone.

• Double Helix

• Anti-Parallel

Page 24: An Ecological Perspective (BIOL 346) Talk one: Biological Ethics.

DNA Replication• Adenine (A) always base pairs with thymine

(T)• Guanine (G) always base pairs with

Cytosine (C)• ALL Down to HYDROGEN Bonding• Requires steps:

– H bonds break as enzymes unwind molecule– New nucleotides (always in nucleus) fit into

place beside old strand in a process called Complementary Base Pairing.

– New nucleotides joined together by enzyme called DNA Polymerase

Page 25: An Ecological Perspective (BIOL 346) Talk one: Biological Ethics.

Central Dogma of Molecular Biology

Page 26: An Ecological Perspective (BIOL 346) Talk one: Biological Ethics.

So, how did Thalidomide affect DNA?

• Regulation of gene expression:– Gene transcription begins with the enzyme RNA polymerase

binding to a promoter sequence.

– Allows transcription to occur DNA – RNA - protein

Page 27: An Ecological Perspective (BIOL 346) Talk one: Biological Ethics.

So, how did Thalidomide affect DNA?

• When the polymerases stays attached to the promoter longer more copies are transcribed

• On the DNA near the promoter there are regulatory gene sequences called enhancers. – Enhancers cause polymerase to bind more tightly and

more gene expression occurs

Page 28: An Ecological Perspective (BIOL 346) Talk one: Biological Ethics.

So, how did Thalidomide affect DNA?

• If repressors bind to the regulatory sequences RNA polymerase is blocked from the promoter and transcription is halted.

• Thus gene expression stops

Page 29: An Ecological Perspective (BIOL 346) Talk one: Biological Ethics.

So, how did Thalidomide affect DNA?

• So, things to remember:

• All genes are coded for at the genetic level by four nucleotide bases (A, C, G, and T) and each gene has a unique coding and relative ratio of these bases.

• Gene expression is highly regulated:– Promoters, enhancers, and repressors

• In limb development, the genes involved have a VERY HIGH relative ratio of guanine (G).

Page 30: An Ecological Perspective (BIOL 346) Talk one: Biological Ethics.

Thalidomide• The structure of thalidomide

is similar to that of the DNA purine bases adenine (A) and guanine (G).

• In solution, thalidomide binds more readily to guanine than to adenine, and has almost no affinity for the other nucleotides, cytosine (C) and thymine (T).

• Furthermore, thalidomide can intercalate into DNA, presumably at G-rich sites.

Page 31: An Ecological Perspective (BIOL 346) Talk one: Biological Ethics.

Thalidomide• Thalidomide or one of its

metabolites intercalates into these G-rich promoter regions, inhibiting the production of proteins and blocking development of the limb buds.

• This intercalation would significantly affect the genes that rely primarily on guanine sequences.

• Most other developing tissues in the embryo rely on pathways without guanine, and are therefore not affected by thalidomide

Page 32: An Ecological Perspective (BIOL 346) Talk one: Biological Ethics.

Thalidomide• In UK alone there were

12,000 victims.

• Sometimes functional feet and hands were amputated to allow the fitting of lower- and upper-limb Prosthesis in order for the children to appear “normal”.

• Special school were set up too, in an attempt to keep the children out of sight and out of the minds of the public.

Page 33: An Ecological Perspective (BIOL 346) Talk one: Biological Ethics.

Thalidomide• Victims of the 1970s

Thalidomide scandal have passed their deformities on to their children.

• Turns out that Thalidomide altered the DNA of the victims – so arms and legs are not developed!

Page 34: An Ecological Perspective (BIOL 346) Talk one: Biological Ethics.

Thalidomide, Still?!!!!!!• Still in use today

• Cancer treatments– by cutting off the flow of blood

to tumors

• Leprosy– is an infectious disease caused

by a DNA plasmid – invades human nerves.

– If untreated can eventually cause a variety of skin problems, loss of feeling, and

paralysis of the hands and feet .

Page 35: An Ecological Perspective (BIOL 346) Talk one: Biological Ethics.

Genetically modified crops• All plant characteristics, such as size, texture, and

sweetness, are determined on the genetic level.

• Also:• The hardiness of crop plants.• Their drought resistance. • Rate of growth under different soil conditions. • Dependence on fertilizers.• Resistance to various pests and diseases.

• Used to do this by selective breeding

Page 36: An Ecological Perspective (BIOL 346) Talk one: Biological Ethics.

Genetically modified crops• Agrobacterium method

– Uses the natural infection mechanism of a plant pathogen

– Agrobacterium tumefaciens naturally infects the wound sites in dicotyledonous plant causing the formation of the crown gall tumors.

– Capable to transfer a particular DNA segment (T-DNA) of the tumor-inducing (Ti) plasmid into the nucleus of infected cells where it is integrated fully into the host genome and transcribed, causing the crown gall disease.

• So the pathogen inserts the new DNA with great success!!!

Page 37: An Ecological Perspective (BIOL 346) Talk one: Biological Ethics.

What people think of using GM Plants!

• Survey carried out by: – The Scientist Magazine.

• Feb 2004, No/15401

• 302 readers responded to survey

• Yes, a small group, as there are seven billion people on the planet

• Interesting questions!

• What to YOU think?

Page 38: An Ecological Perspective (BIOL 346) Talk one: Biological Ethics.

Genetically modified crops• Issues:• Destroying ecosystems – tomatoes are

now growing in the artic tundra with fish antifreeze in them!

• Destroying ecosystems – will the toxin now being produced by pest-resistance stains kill “friendly” insects such as butterflies.

• Altering nature – should we be swapping genes between species?

Page 39: An Ecological Perspective (BIOL 346) Talk one: Biological Ethics.

Genetically modified crops• Issues:• Vegetarians – what about those

tomatoes?

• Religious dietary laws – anything from a pig?

• Cross-pollination – producing a super-weed

• Human health – what of the antibiotic marker gene?

Page 40: An Ecological Perspective (BIOL 346) Talk one: Biological Ethics.

The End.Any Questions?