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Genetic technology Unit 4 Chapter 13
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Genetic technology Unit 4 Chapter 13. Selective Breeding Choosing plants and animals with the most desired traits to be parents of the next generation.

Dec 25, 2015

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Page 1: Genetic technology Unit 4 Chapter 13. Selective Breeding Choosing plants and animals with the most desired traits to be parents of the next generation.

Genetic technology

Unit 4

Chapter 13

Page 2: Genetic technology Unit 4 Chapter 13. Selective Breeding Choosing plants and animals with the most desired traits to be parents of the next generation.

Selective Breeding

Choosing plants and animals with the most desired traits to be parents of the next generation

Increases amount of desired genes in a population

Inbreeding is mating between closely related individuals and ensures pure lines.

Overtime, inbreeding is detrimental because of deleterious recessive genes.

Page 3: Genetic technology Unit 4 Chapter 13. Selective Breeding Choosing plants and animals with the most desired traits to be parents of the next generation.

Selective breeding common in dogs and horses.

Page 4: Genetic technology Unit 4 Chapter 13. Selective Breeding Choosing plants and animals with the most desired traits to be parents of the next generation.

Hybrid vigor

A hybrid is the offspring of parents that have different forms of a trait.

Hybrids produced by crossing two purebred plants are often larger and stronger than their parents.

Plants are often hybrids.

Page 5: Genetic technology Unit 4 Chapter 13. Selective Breeding Choosing plants and animals with the most desired traits to be parents of the next generation.

Test cross

a method of breeding dominant phenotype individual to homozygous recessive individual to determine the dominant individual’s genotype If the organism being tested is heterozygous, the

expected 1:1 phenotypic ratio will be observed.

Page 6: Genetic technology Unit 4 Chapter 13. Selective Breeding Choosing plants and animals with the most desired traits to be parents of the next generation.

Genetic engineering

and more reliable method for increasing the frequency of a specific allele in a population

Recombinant DNA technology: cutting (cleaving) DNA from one organism into small fragments and inserting the fragments into a host organism of the same or a different species

Page 7: Genetic technology Unit 4 Chapter 13. Selective Breeding Choosing plants and animals with the most desired traits to be parents of the next generation.

Transgenic organisms

Plants and animals that contain functional recombinant DNA from an organism of a different genus are known as transgenic organisms because they contain foreign DNA.

Page 8: Genetic technology Unit 4 Chapter 13. Selective Breeding Choosing plants and animals with the most desired traits to be parents of the next generation.

Steps for recombining DNA

1. Isolate the foreign DNA fragment that will be inserted using restriction enzymes bacterial proteins that have the ability to cut both

strands of the DNA molecule at a specific nucleotide sequence called palindromes

2. Attach the DNA fragment to a carrier

3. Transfer into the host organism

Page 9: Genetic technology Unit 4 Chapter 13. Selective Breeding Choosing plants and animals with the most desired traits to be parents of the next generation.

Recombinant DNA technology

Page 10: Genetic technology Unit 4 Chapter 13. Selective Breeding Choosing plants and animals with the most desired traits to be parents of the next generation.

Restriction enzyme action

Click on image to play video.

Page 11: Genetic technology Unit 4 Chapter 13. Selective Breeding Choosing plants and animals with the most desired traits to be parents of the next generation.

Vector

Mechanical or biological way for DNA from one species to be carried into a host cell

Click on image to play video.

Page 12: Genetic technology Unit 4 Chapter 13. Selective Breeding Choosing plants and animals with the most desired traits to be parents of the next generation.

Gene cloning

After foreign DNA has been inserted into a plasmid, the recombined DNA is transferred into a bacterial cell.

Advantage: Bacteria reproduce quickly and can produce millions of copies of the recombinant DNA.

Each identical recombinant DNA molecule is called a gene clone.

Page 13: Genetic technology Unit 4 Chapter 13. Selective Breeding Choosing plants and animals with the most desired traits to be parents of the next generation.

Gene cloning using plasmid vectors

Page 14: Genetic technology Unit 4 Chapter 13. Selective Breeding Choosing plants and animals with the most desired traits to be parents of the next generation.

Cloned animal – Dolly the sheep

Page 15: Genetic technology Unit 4 Chapter 13. Selective Breeding Choosing plants and animals with the most desired traits to be parents of the next generation.

Polymerase chain reaction

Method to copy DNA outside of a living organism host

Heat, enzymes, and nucleotides are mixed in a machine to make multiple DNA copies.

Page 16: Genetic technology Unit 4 Chapter 13. Selective Breeding Choosing plants and animals with the most desired traits to be parents of the next generation.

Sequencing DNA

Machines in laboratories can determine the nucleotide order of small DNA fragments.

The DNA sequence can be visualized using gel electrophoresis techniques.

Page 17: Genetic technology Unit 4 Chapter 13. Selective Breeding Choosing plants and animals with the most desired traits to be parents of the next generation.

The entire human genome has been sequenced. In 1990, scientists in the United States

organized the Human Genome Project (HGP). It is an international effort to completely map and sequence the human genome, the approximately 35 000-40 000 genes on the 46 human chromosomes.

In February of 2001, the HGP published its working draft of the 3 billion base pairs of DNA in most human cells.

The sequence of chromosomes 21 and 22 was finished by May 2000.

Page 18: Genetic technology Unit 4 Chapter 13. Selective Breeding Choosing plants and animals with the most desired traits to be parents of the next generation.

Gel electrophoresis

DNA cut with restriction enzymes are loaded into a gel.

Electric currents separate the DNA fragments.

DNA from two sources can be compared for similarities.

Page 19: Genetic technology Unit 4 Chapter 13. Selective Breeding Choosing plants and animals with the most desired traits to be parents of the next generation.

Loading gel

Page 20: Genetic technology Unit 4 Chapter 13. Selective Breeding Choosing plants and animals with the most desired traits to be parents of the next generation.

Applying electric field to separate DNA

Page 21: Genetic technology Unit 4 Chapter 13. Selective Breeding Choosing plants and animals with the most desired traits to be parents of the next generation.

Comparing DNA fragments for similarities

Page 22: Genetic technology Unit 4 Chapter 13. Selective Breeding Choosing plants and animals with the most desired traits to be parents of the next generation.

DNA fingerprinting

DNA fingerprinting can be used to convict or acquit individuals of criminal offenses because every person is genetically unique

Page 23: Genetic technology Unit 4 Chapter 13. Selective Breeding Choosing plants and animals with the most desired traits to be parents of the next generation.

Recombinant DNA technology in society Scientists have modified

the bacterium E. coli to produce the expensive indigo dye that is used to color denim blue jeans.

Pharmaceutical companies already are producing molecules made by recombinant DNA to treat human diseases

Page 24: Genetic technology Unit 4 Chapter 13. Selective Breeding Choosing plants and animals with the most desired traits to be parents of the next generation.

Recombinant technology in society

Recombinant bacteria are used in the production of human growth hormone to treat pituitary dwarfism.

Also, the human gene for insulin is inserted into a bacterial plasmid by genetic engineering techniques. Recombinant bacteria produce large quantities of insulin

Scientists can study diseases and the role specific genes play in an organism by using transgenic animals

Crops have been developed that are better tasting, stay fresh longer, and are protected from disease and insect infestations

Page 25: Genetic technology Unit 4 Chapter 13. Selective Breeding Choosing plants and animals with the most desired traits to be parents of the next generation.

Gene therapy

Gene therapy is the insertion of normal genes into human cells to correct genetic disorders