Selective Breeding 5.10 understand that plants with desired characteristics can be developed by selective breeding 5.11 understand that animals with desired characteristics can be developed by selective breeding.
Jun 01, 2015
Selective Breeding 5.10 understand that plants with desired characteristics can be developed by selective breeding
5.11 understand that animals with desired characteristics can be developed by selective breeding.
Definition5.10 understand that plants with desired characteristics can be developed by selective breeding
5.11 understand that animals with desired characteristics can be developed by selective breeding.
Selective Breeding:a. Individuals with desired characteristics are
bred togetherb. This is to produce offspring which express
desired characteristics.c. Offspring with desired characteristics are
bredd. Repeat over many generations
Examples:
Increased yield and reduction of stem length in wheat
Increased yield of meat and milk in cattle.
Examples5.10 understand that plants with desired characteristics can be developed by selective breeding
5.11 understand that animals with desired characteristics can be developed by selective breeding.
Selective Breeding Points5.10 understand that plants with desired characteristics can be developed by selective breeding
5.11 understand that animals with desired characteristics can be developed by selective breeding.
• Process of controlled sexual reproduction• Potentially can take thousands of years• Can lead to huge variation in a species. Example: dog family
Selective Breeding(a simple how to guide…. again)
5.10 understand that plants with desired characteristics can be developed by selective breeding5.11 understand that animals with desired characteristics can be developed by selective breeding.
• Identify individual organisms that have a desirable trait in a population.
• Breed these individuals together.• From offspring choose those with the
desirable trait.• Breed these offspring together.• Continue for a long, long, long time
Genetic ModificationSyllabus points 5.12 – 5.20
Review the structure of DNA:
DNA is a double-stranded molecule. The strands coil up to form a double-helix. The strands are linked by a series of paired bases.
Thymine (T) pairs with Adenine (A) Guanine (G) pairs with Cytosine (C)
Genetic ModificationSyllabus points 5.12 – 5.20
Process of Genetic Engineering5.14 understand that large amounts of human insulin can be manufactured from genetically modified bacteria that are grown in a fermenter
The example you need to know is the creation of E coli bacteria that makes human insulin.
However, a more fun example is Alba, the glow-in-the-dark bunny, and pigs that makes the protein luminol (FGP)
(taken from a jellyfish!)
TRANSGENIC ORGANISMS5.12 describe the use of restriction enzymes to cut DNA at specific sites and ligase enzymes to join pieces of DNA together
The organism that receives the new gene from a different species is a transgenic organism.
PROCESS 5.12 describe the use of restriction enzymes to cut DNA at specific sites and ligase enzymes to join pieces of DNA together
1) Plasmids are isolated from a bacterium.
2) They are cut open with a specific restriction enzyme.
3) The gene to be transferred is cut from the donor DNA using the same restriction enzyme, so that the plasmid and the gene have the same sticky ends and can be joined together. (ends match)
4) The 'opened-up' plasmids and the isolated gene are mixed with a DNA ligase enzyme to create recombinant plasmids.
5) Bacteria are incubated with the recombinant DNA.
6) Some bacteria will take up the plasmids.
PROCESS 5.12 describe the use of restriction enzymes to cut DNA at specific sites and ligase enzymes to join pieces of DNA together
7) The bacteria that have taken up the plasmid now contain the gene from the donor cell. This could be a gene controlling the production of human insulin.
8) So the bacterium is transgenic.
PROCESS 5.12 describe the use of restriction enzymes to cut DNA at specific sites and ligase enzymes to join pieces of DNA together
Making a Transgenic Bacterium5.12 describe the use of restriction enzymes to cut DNA at specific sites and ligase enzymes to join pieces of DNA together
On your diagram include the enzymes used to ‘cut’ and ‘stitch’ back to together the DNA. Include where the Vector would be used.
• Common vectors include Viruses and Plasmids
• Now your transgenic bacterium is complete. All you need to do is grow it in a fermenter and it makes lots of insulin for you!
5.13 describe how plasmids and viruses can act as vectors, which take up pieces of DNA, then insert this recombinant DNA into other cells
Putting it all together5.12 describe the use of restriction enzymes to cut DNA at specific sites and ligase enzymes to join pieces of DNA together
Transgenic Organism 5.16 understand that the term transgenic means the transfer of genetic material from one species to a different species. (TA)
Organism containing DNA from two or more sources (i.e. an organism that’s been genetically engineered to
express a foreign gene)
Plants are good to genetically engineer because they are more simple and there are fewer ethical issues.
Genetically modified (GM) crops are engineered to: 5.15 evaluate the potential for using genetically modified plants to improve food production (illustrated by plants with improved resistance to pests)
• Have bigger yields • Produce their own insecticide• Be frost resistant (e.g. frost resistant strawberries) • Have resistance to disease • Grow in harsher environments (e.g. drought-resistant rice)• Grow in harsher environments (e.g. salt resistant wheat) • Have a longer sell-by date (e.g. non-squash tomatoes) • Be a different colour / taste to normal (e.g. chocolate flavoured
carrots) • Have vitamins in them that they would not normally have (e.g.
golden rice) • Have stronger taste (e.g. chilli's) • Be easier to eat (e.g. easy-peel oranges)
CLONINGSyllabus points 5.17 – 5.20
Cloning is used to make many copies of a single individual. Usually the individual has a very desirable phenotype and has often been produced at the end
of a Selective Breeding or GE programme.CLONES ARE: Genetically Identical Organisms
Start 2min
Cloning in Plants5.18 understand how micropropagation can be used to produce commercial quantities of identical plants (clones) with desirable characteristics
The easiest way to clone a plant is to take a cutting or a graft (asexual reproduction).
However, micro propagation (tissue culture) can be used in large-scale cloning programmes.
Which desirable characteristics in cloned plants do you want to express (selective breeding vs GM)?
Diagram of Propagation 5.17 describe the process of micropropagation (tissue culture) in which small pieces of plants (explants) are grown in vitro using nutrient media
Diagram of Propagation 5.17 describe the process of micropropagation (tissue culture) in which small pieces of plants (explants) are grown in vitro using nutrient media
Micro propagation 5.17 describe the process of micropropagation (tissue culture) in which small pieces of plants (explants) are grown in vitro using nutrient media
1) Micro-propagation - small pieces of plants (explants) or tissue samples are grown in a Petri dish on nutrient medium (agar). Growing a living organism in an artificial environment is
called In Vitro.
2) Hormones / bleach are added to the explant so it will grow into a miniature plant (a plantlet).
3) This can be done on a huge scale to produce 1000s of plantlets from a single culture.
How do you draw it?Include vocabulary:Auxin/BleachNutrient agarIn VitroCutting/Tissue Sample/explantsPlantlets(you can include more)
Diagram of Propagation 5.17 describe the process of micropropagation (tissue culture) in which small pieces of plants (explants) are grown in vitro using nutrient media
Advantages and Disadvantages to clones 5.17 describe the process of micropropagation (tissue culture) in which small pieces of plants (explants) are grown in vitro using nutrient media
Animal Cloning 5.19 describe the stages in the production of cloned mammals involving the introduction of a diploid nucleus from a mature cell into an
enucleated egg cell, illustrated by Dolly the sheep
• Take an embryonic cell
• Remove it’s nucleus (enucleate it) • Replace with the nucleus from an adult cell (from the
animal you want to clone)
• Give it an electrical shock
• The embryonic cell grows into an embryo clone of the adult, from which the donor nucleus came
This process was used to create Dolly the sheep
Animal Cloning 5.19 describe the stages in the production of cloned mammals involving the introduction of a diploid nucleus from a mature cell into an
enucleated egg cell, illustrated by Dolly the sheep
Animal Cloning 5.19 describe the stages in the production of cloned mammals involving the introduction of a diploid nucleus from a mature cell into an
enucleated egg cell, illustrated by Dolly the sheep
WHY CLONE? 5.20 evaluate the potential for using cloned transgenic animals, for example to produce commercial quantities of human antibodies
or organs for transplantation. (TA)
Cloning can be used beneficially in agriculture to increase the yield of crop plants.
Cloning genetically engineered animals organisms allows us to mass-produce very useful organisms e.g. the E. coli bacterium that makes human insulin has been cloned many times.
Now all diabetics have access to human insulin.
Making Insulin5.20 evaluate the potential for using cloned transgenic animals, for example to produce commercial quantities of human antibodies or organs
for transplantation. (TA)
Human antibodies5.20 evaluate the potential for using cloned transgenic animals, for example to produce commercial quantities of human antibodies
or organs for transplantation. (TA)
To make human antibodies:1.Create transgenic mice
with human DNA (for immune system)
2.Infect mice with disease3.Mice produce human
antibodies to disease4.Collect mouse blood and
remove antibodies5.Inject sick humans with
antibodies
1)Milk it or Bleed it2)Can give more blood
COMMERCIAL ORGANS FROM CLONES!!!!
5.20 evaluate the potential for using cloned transgenic animals, for example to produce commercial quantities of human antibodies or organs for transplantation. (TA)
The key word to this syllabus point is EVALUATE
1) Morality2) Political3) Religious
Start 11.15
The CLONE Wars!!!!5.20 evaluate the potential for using cloned transgenic animals, for example to produce commercial quantities of human antibodies or organs
for transplantation. (TA)
Advantages
Disadvantages
Development of cloned animals which have been genetically engineered to produce valuable proteins in their milk or blood.
Create identical organisms with exact genetic characteristics required.
Cloning can save animals form extinction.
Concerns about the ethics of cloning.
Cloning limits variation. This can effect natural selection.
Concerns about using the technique to clone humans in the future.