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DNA Technology and Genomics
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DNA Technology and Genomics

Jan 08, 2016

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DNA Technology and Genomics. Genetic Engineering/ DNA Technology. 3 types of Cloning Technologies: Recombinant DNA Technology/ DNA Cloning 2. Reproductive Cloning 3. Therapeutic Cloning. Cloning the bovine growth hormone (BGH) gene. Recombinant DNA Technology/ DNA Cloning. Cloning a Gene. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Page 1: DNA Technology and Genomics

DNA Technology and Genomics

Page 2: DNA Technology and Genomics

Genetic Engineering/ DNA Technology

3 types of Cloning Technologies:

1. Recombinant DNA Technology/ DNA Cloning

2. Reproductive Cloning

3. Therapeutic Cloning

Page 3: DNA Technology and Genomics

Cloning the bovine growth hormone (BGH) gene

Page 4: DNA Technology and Genomics

Recombinant DNA Technology/DNA Cloning

Page 5: DNA Technology and Genomics

Cloning a Gene

• Cloning means making many copies of a gene

Page 6: DNA Technology and Genomics

Recombinant DNA Technology/DNA Cloning

1. Remove the Gene of Interest2. Cut the Plasmid DNA3. Insert the Gene into the Bacterial

Plasmid4. Insert the Recombined Plasmid

into the Bacterial Cell5. Let the Bacteria Reproduce

Page 7: DNA Technology and Genomics

1. Remove the gene of interest (ex: BGH gene) using restriction enzymes

Restriction enzymes cut DNA at specific sequences called palindromes . . .

Page 8: DNA Technology and Genomics

Restriction Enzymes Leave “Sticky Ends”

Page 9: DNA Technology and Genomics

Restriction Enzymes

• The unpaired bases on the sticky ends form bonds with any complementary bases with which they come into contact

Page 10: DNA Technology and Genomics

2. Cut the Plasmid DNA with the Same Restriction Enzyme

Page 11: DNA Technology and Genomics

3. Insert the Gene of Interest into the Bacterial Plasmid

(The bacterial plasmid is also cut with the restriction enzyme, leaving sticky ends)

Page 12: DNA Technology and Genomics

4. Insert the Recombined Plasmid into a Bacterial Cell

Page 13: DNA Technology and Genomics

5. Let the Bacteria Reproduce

Page 14: DNA Technology and Genomics

Other Proteins Made by DNA Cloning:

•Insulin for diabetics•Clotting factors for hemophiliacs

Page 15: DNA Technology and Genomics

Basic Versus Applied Research

Basic research

• no profit motive or direct commercial application – generally government funded

Applied research

• immediate and profitable application – generally privately funded

Page 16: DNA Technology and Genomics

Reproductive Cloning/Cloning Entire Organisms

Page 17: DNA Technology and Genomics

Reproductive Cloning

• Technology used to generate an animal that has the same nuclear DNA as another curretly or previously existing animal

Page 18: DNA Technology and Genomics

Steps in Nuclear Transfer

Page 19: DNA Technology and Genomics

Steps in Somatic Cell Nuclear Transfer

Page 20: DNA Technology and Genomics

Results of Nuclear Transfer Experiments

There were 277 failures before this nuclear transfer technique succeeded;

Page 21: DNA Technology and Genomics

Reproductive Cloning

Dolly was successfully born in 1997

Page 22: DNA Technology and Genomics

Reproductive Cloning

• Dolly was put to sleep at the age of 6 in 2003

• She was suffering from arthritis and a progressive lung disease

• These are usually only seen in old sheep

Page 23: DNA Technology and Genomics

Other Organisms Reproductively Cloned

Mouse

Cow

Goat

Mule

Horse

Rabbit

Cat

Pig

Dog

Rat

Deer

Page 24: DNA Technology and Genomics

Why Do Reproductive Cloning?

Page 25: DNA Technology and Genomics

Have We Reproductively Cloned Humans?

Page 26: DNA Technology and Genomics

Opposition and Support of Human Cloning

Page 27: DNA Technology and Genomics

What do YOU think?

Page 28: DNA Technology and Genomics

Therapeutic Cloning/ Embryo Cloning

• Instead of cloning entire organisms, there is therapeutic cloning

• Stem cells are induced to turn into specific tissue cells

Page 29: DNA Technology and Genomics

Therapeutic Cloning

Page 30: DNA Technology and Genomics

The Human Genome Project

Sequenced the entire human genome

Page 31: DNA Technology and Genomics

Goals of The Human Genome Project

Page 32: DNA Technology and Genomics

Organisms With Genome Sequenced

Rhesus Macaque

Fruit Fly

Zebra fish

Potato

Page 33: DNA Technology and Genomics

Many organisms have genome projects that have either been completed or will be completed shortly, including

:

•Humans•Neanderthal•Haemophilus influenzae, a bacterium•Common House Mouse•Brown Rat•Common Chimpanzee•Rhesus Monkey•Domestic Chicken•Domestic Cat•Domestic Dog•Common fruit fly•Baker's yeast

Page 34: DNA Technology and Genomics

Many organisms have genome projects that have either been completed or will be completed shortly, including

•Red bread mold,

•Thale Cress

•Rice

•Common Wheat

•Corn

•Poplar Tree

•E. coli bacteria

•SARS virus

•Nematode worm

•Zebra fish

•Tomato

•Potato

•Western Honey Bee

•Grapevine

•Spanish flu virus

Page 35: DNA Technology and Genomics

The Human Genome Project

• These were used as model organisms in genetic studies

• These model organisms contain genes that are the same as human genes

Page 36: DNA Technology and Genomics

Gene Testing

Page 37: DNA Technology and Genomics

DNA Chips

Page 38: DNA Technology and Genomics

Pros and Cons of Gene Testing

Page 39: DNA Technology and Genomics

Gene Therapy

• Once the genetics are worked out, gene therapy can be researched

• Replacing defective genes with functional ones

– Germ line gene therapy in embryos– Somatic cell gene therapy in

individual somatic cells in affected tissues

Page 40: DNA Technology and Genomics

Gene Therapy

• Germ Line Gene Therapy

• Somatic Cell Gene Therapy

Page 41: DNA Technology and Genomics

Gene Therapy

• Non disease causing virus is genetically engineered with the functioning gene that is needed in SCID patients

• The virus infects the immune cells and the immune cells get the functioning gene

Page 42: DNA Technology and Genomics

Gene Therapy

Page 43: DNA Technology and Genomics

Gene Therapy

• Treatment for SCID (severe combined immunodeficiency)

• Gene therapy in cells of the immune system

Page 44: DNA Technology and Genomics

Somatic Gene Therapy

• is not widely used

• Is only for single gene disorders with cells that can be removed, engineered and then replaced in the body

Page 45: DNA Technology and Genomics

Somatic Gene Therapy

• The condition may still be passed to offspring, because somatic cell gene therapy does not treat all the cells in the body

Page 46: DNA Technology and Genomics

Setbacks to Gene Therapy

Page 47: DNA Technology and Genomics

1.Treat Cancer

2. Gene Therapy to treat inherited form of blindness is successful!

Recent Successes in Gene Therapy

Page 48: DNA Technology and Genomics

Genetically Modified Crop Plants

Page 49: DNA Technology and Genomics
Page 50: DNA Technology and Genomics
Page 51: DNA Technology and Genomics

Genetically Modified Food

Page 52: DNA Technology and Genomics

Inserting the Gene

Page 53: DNA Technology and Genomics

Inserting the Gene

Page 54: DNA Technology and Genomics

Inserting the Gene

Page 55: DNA Technology and Genomics

Pros to Creating Genetically Modified Food

Page 56: DNA Technology and Genomics

Genetic Engineers CanModify Food

• Transgenic organisms are produced when a gene from one organism is incorporated into the genome of another

• The more popular term for transgenic organisms is GMO, for genetically modified organism

• GM foods means genetically modified

Page 57: DNA Technology and Genomics

Cons to Creating Genetically Modified Food

Page 58: DNA Technology and Genomics

Genetically Modified Foods in the U.S. Diet

• Over half of all food in U.S. market contain at least some GM foods

– Most soybeans grown are modified for herbicide resistance

– GM corn – an ingredient in most processed foods – is common as well

– GM canola and cottonseed oils are used in a huge range of food products

Page 59: DNA Technology and Genomics

FDA Regulations

• Manufactures must get FDA approval for an food not generally recognized as safe (GRAS), including new genetically engineered food substances

• The FDA declared milk from rBGH cows safe for consumption in 1993

Page 60: DNA Technology and Genomics

How Are GM Foods Evaluated for Safety?

• The EPA must approve all GM crops• GM foods can cause allergic

reactions (8% of us are allergic to foods)

• Newly inserted genes may also encode proteins that prove to be toxins