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Industrial use of living organisms, or parts of living organisms to produce foods, drugs, or other products.

Dec 25, 2015

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Beverly Young
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Page 1: Industrial use of living organisms, or parts of living organisms to produce foods, drugs, or other products.

industrial use of living organisms, or parts of living organisms to produce foods,

drugs, or other products

Page 2: Industrial use of living organisms, or parts of living organisms to produce foods, drugs, or other products.

Genetic Engineering

• Means making changes to DNA in order to change the way living things work.

• Creates new crops and farm animals• Make bacteria that can make medicines• Grow human body parts• Prevent genetic diseases, change

humans

Page 3: Industrial use of living organisms, or parts of living organisms to produce foods, drugs, or other products.

Glowing Cats?

Page 4: Industrial use of living organisms, or parts of living organisms to produce foods, drugs, or other products.

Mice?

http://www.glowingpets.com/pets/glow_monkey.htm

What’s Next?Red fish, blue fish, yellow fish, GLOW FISH?

Page 5: Industrial use of living organisms, or parts of living organisms to produce foods, drugs, or other products.

How do they do that?

1. The jellyfish has a gene that makes a glowing protein. This makes the jellyfish glow in some types of light.

2. The glowing gene is taken from a jellyfish cell and spliced (inserted) into an empty virus cell (with no bad virus in it)

3. The genetically engineered virus attaches itself to the fertilized mouse egg cell.

4. The virus delivers the glowing gene into the egg cell nucleus, where it joins the mouse DNA.

5. The genetically engineered mouse egg grows into an adult mouse which will make the glowing protein. The glow is too faint to see under normal lights but can be detected using a special camera.

Jellyfish cell

Virus

Mouse cell

Virus inserting their DNA into a cell

Page 6: Industrial use of living organisms, or parts of living organisms to produce foods, drugs, or other products.

Genetically Modified Animals

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=f69TUDbPdLs

•start at 8:00 end 8:53•start 10:30 end 14:26

Using Genetic Engineering to modify how long it take a chicken to grow. Check it out.

Page 7: Industrial use of living organisms, or parts of living organisms to produce foods, drugs, or other products.

What do you think?

Page 8: Industrial use of living organisms, or parts of living organisms to produce foods, drugs, or other products.

Where does our food come from?

• http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=f69TUDbPdLs

• Start 1:05 end 2:50

Page 9: Industrial use of living organisms, or parts of living organisms to produce foods, drugs, or other products.

What are Genetically

Modified Foods?

“Frankenfoods”?

You have already eaten GM foods. Some GM tomatoes, for example, have had their genes altered to stop them from going soft while they are still growing. For several years they were widely sold in tomato paste. The GM foods we eat have all been tested for safety. But some people worry about the long term effects of eating genetically modified foods!

Page 10: Industrial use of living organisms, or parts of living organisms to produce foods, drugs, or other products.
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This diagram shows how one type of GM food, a strawberry that resists frost damage is made. The flounder is a fish that live in icy seas. It has a gene that stops it from freezing to death. Strawberries are soft fruits that can easily be damaged by frost.

1. The flounder’s antifreeze gene is copied and inserted into a small ring of DNA taken from a bacteria cell.

2. The DNA ring containing the flounder gene is put into a second bacterium.

3. This second bacterium is used to infect the strawberry cell. The flounder’s antifreeze gene enters the strawberry’s DNA.

Strawberry cell with Antifreeze gene

4. The new GM strawberry cell is grown into a GM strawberry plant which can be bred many times.

Thanks to the new gene, GM strawberries make a protein which helps them resist frost. They don’t

contain any other fish genes and, and do not taste or smell of fish.

Wonder what they used to make this one green!

Page 12: Industrial use of living organisms, or parts of living organisms to produce foods, drugs, or other products.

What Have I Eaten?Genetically modified (GM) foods possess specific traits such as tolerance to herbicides or resistance to insects or viruses.

By most estimates, up to 70% of the processed foods at your local grocery store contain at least one ingredient that’s been genetically altered

Genetically modified to reduce being eaten by insects.

Genetically modified to travel better so don’t have to be picked when green – better tasting!

ClickClick

Page 13: Industrial use of living organisms, or parts of living organisms to produce foods, drugs, or other products.

Going Bananas? According to recent reports, the world may soon be out of bananas. Because of the starchy fruit’s unique method of reproduction, it seems, banana plantations in Africa, Asia and Central America are uniquely susceptible to fungi, viruses and pests. Unless scientists can find a way to genetically enhance the banana’s ability to ward off parasites, we could be bananaless in ten years. Several agroscience companies believe they can genetically engineer such an invincible banana by copying parts of the genetic codes of other fruits and instilling them into the banana.

http://gslc.genetics.utah.edu/features/gmfoods/

Page 14: Industrial use of living organisms, or parts of living organisms to produce foods, drugs, or other products.

Golden Rice is Modified to be Provide a Dietary Source of Vitamin A

Golden rice is genetically modified rice that now contains a large amount of A-vitamins. Or more correctly, the rice contains the element beta-carotene which is converted in the body into Vitamin-A. So when you eat golden rice, you get more vitamin A.

n 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).

Page 15: Industrial use of living organisms, or parts of living organisms to produce foods, drugs, or other products.

Lets try engineering a crop!http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/harvest/engineer/

Page 16: Industrial use of living organisms, or parts of living organisms to produce foods, drugs, or other products.

Pros and ConsCrops • Better taste and quality • Less time to ripen.• More nutrients, more food, and stress tolerance • Improved resistance to disease, pests, and

herbicides • New products and growing techniques Animals • Increased resistance, productivity, hardiness, and

feed efficiency • Better yields of meat, eggs, and milk • Improved animal health and diagnostic methods Environment • "Friendly" bio herbicides and bio insecticides • Conservation of soil, water, and energy • Better natural waste management • More efficient processing Society • More food for growing populations

Safety • Potential human health impact: allergens, transfer

of antibiotic resistance markers, unknown effects • Potential environmental impact: unintended

transfer of transgenes through cross-pollination, loss of flora and fauna biodiversity

Access and Intellectual Property • Domination of world food production by a few

companies • Increasing dependence on Industrialized nations by

developing countries Ethics • Violation of natural organisms' intrinsic values • Tampering with nature by mixing genes among

species • Objections to consuming animal genes in plants and

vice versa • Stress for animal Labeling • Not mandatory in some countries (e.g., U. States) • Mixing GM crops with non-GM confounds labeling

attempts

Page 17: Industrial use of living organisms, or parts of living organisms to produce foods, drugs, or other products.

Corn in EVERYTHING!

• start 20:50 end 22:05• Start 22:55 end 24:53 –

cow eating corn

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=f69TUDbPdLs

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Make your own GMO

•You will create a genetically modified organism that will be beneficial to society.

•You can choose to make a hybrid organism by selecting a gene from one

organism and putting it into another-OR-

•you can create a new “breed” of an organism that has new and different

characteristics.

Page 19: Industrial use of living organisms, or parts of living organisms to produce foods, drugs, or other products.

Cloning

Click and Clone:http://learn.genetics.utah.edu/content/tech/cloning/clickandclone/

Page 20: Industrial use of living organisms, or parts of living organisms to produce foods, drugs, or other products.

Now cats may have more than nine lives. The company that funded the first successful cloning of a domestic cat two years ago has gone commercial. The cost? U.S. $50,000 each.

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"Cc," the first-ever cloned cat shown here at seven weeks old with Allie, her

surrogate mother.

The cat was cloned by transplanting DNA from Rainbow, a female three-colored (tortoiseshell or calico) cat into an egg cell whose nucleus had been removed, and then implanting this embryo into Allie, the surrogate mother. "CC's coat color suggests that she is a clone, and a genetic match between CC and the donor mother confirms this," the researchers say.

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In most cases, owners want to clone their pets because they're experiencing difficulty dealing with the loss, or eventual loss, of those pets, according to the Humane Society of the United States (HSUS), an animal-protection group based in Washington, D.C. But given that shelters kill roughly four million animals each year because they're not adopted, HSUS feels cloning new pets should not be done. The group encourages people who want a cat or dog to adopt one from a local shelter. The company is also working on duplicating dogs—specifically, a husky mix named Missy, whose owner, Arizona entrepreneur John Sperling, has pumped millions of dollars into the cloning project since it began in 1997. Missy died at age 15 in 2002, but tissue samples of her have been saved for cloning purposes.

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Rat called Ralph is latest clone Scientists have succeeded in cloning the rat. The researchers from China and France say they managed to create several rodent copies - both male and female. The rat joins a lengthening list of animals that have been cloned from an adult cell. These include sheep, mice, cattle, goats, pigs, cats, mules and horses.

The rat has come later than the others because of unique difficulties in controlling the development of its eggs in the early stages of the cloning process. Rat eggs activate almost immediately they leave the ovaries, making it difficult to introduce the genetic material of the animal to be copied.

What about dogs? http://myfriendagain.com

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Cloning HUMANS?UK scientists clone human embryo British scientists say they have cloned the country's first human embryo. The Newcastle University team took eggs from 11 women, removed the genetic material and replaced it with DNA from embryonic stem cells. The aim of this kind of work - the subject of fierce debate - is to make cloned embryos from which stem cells can be used to treat diseases. Meanwhile South Korean scientists say they have created stem cells to match individuals for the first time. Stem cell lines were created by taking genetic material from the patient and putting it into a donated egg. The resultant cells were a perfect match for the individual and could mean treatments for diseases like diabetes without problems of rejection. Therapeutic cloning - believed to have huge potential to treat disease and disability - is allowed in Britain. Reproductive cloning - the cloning of human embryos with the intention of creating a baby - was made illegal in 2001.

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Jane is blind and has a guide dog called Bobby. Bobby has been her guide dog for 10 years but is getting old. Bobby is Jayne’s best friend and she feels that without him she couldn’t live. Should Jayne be allowed to clone Bobby before he dies? Should people be allowed to clone their pets?

There is only one Giant Panda left on earth. It does not have a partner to breed with so once it dies the species will be extinct. Should scientists be allowed to clone another Giant Panda to keep the species alive? Should scientists be allowed to clone endangered species?

Scientists believe that stem cells found in human embryos could be used to cure a range of diseases. Should scientists be allowed to clone human embryos to create stems cells for medical purposes?

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John Green is a farmer in Texas and he wants to clone his prize bull to sell it and make money. Should farmers be allowed to clone their best animals to make money?

A developing country with food shortages want to clone their best food producing animals, cows, chickens, pigs etc. to try and produce more food per animal to solve their food shortages. Should countries be allowed to clone animals to increase food production.

Mrs. Jones eldest son Mark is 10 years old and is dying with cancer. Should Mrs. Jones be allowed to clone Mark before he dies? Should people be allowed to clone other humans or clone themselves?