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Recombinant DNA and Genetic Engineering

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Title: Recombinant DNA and Genetic Engineering


1
Recombinant DNA and Genetic Engineering
  • Chapter 16

2
Impacts, IssuesGolden Rice or Frankenfood?
  • Scientists created transgenic rice (Golden Rice)
    as a vitamin A supplement for undernourished
    nations is the benefit worth the risk in these
    gene-manipulated food sources?

3
16.1 Cloning DNA
  • Process to add genes to food or other cell types
    is simple in principle
  • Researchers cut up DNA from different sources,
    then paste the resulting fragments together
  • Cloning vectors can carry foreign DNA into host
    cells

4
Cut and Paste for New DNA Combos
  • Restriction enzymes
  • Bacterial enzymes that cut DNA wherever a
    specific nucleotide sequence occurs
  • Single-stranded DNA tails produced by the same
    restriction enzyme base-pair together
  • DNA ligase bonds sticky ends together
  • Recombinant DNA
  • Composed of DNA from two or more organisms

5
Making Recombinant DNA
This is especially useful to introduce genes into
a sequence in research.
6
DNA Cloning
  • DNA cut into fragments by restriction enzymes is
    inserted into cloning vectors (plasmids) cut with
    the same enzyme
  • Cloning vectors with foreign DNA are placed in
    host cells, which divide and produce many clones,
    each with a copy of the foreign DNA

7
Cloning Vectors
8
DNA Cloning
9
cDNA Cloning
  • Complementary DNA (cDNA)
  • DNA made from an mRNA template
  • Reverse transcriptase transcribes mRNA to DNA,
    forming a hybrid molecule
  • DNA polymerase builds a double-stranded DNA
    molecule that can be cloned
  • Especially useful to obtain DNA without introns.

10
cDNA Cloning by Reverse Transcriptase
11
16.1 Key Concepts DNA Cloning by Lab and Plasmids
  • Researchers routinely make recombinant DNA by
    cutting and pasting together DNA from different
    species
  • Plasmids and other vectors can carry foreign DNA
    into host cells

12
Genomes and DNA Libraries
  • Genome
  • The entire set of genetic material of an organism
  • DNA libraries are sets of cells containing
    various cloned DNA fragments
  • Genomic libraries (all DNA in a genome)
  • cDNA libraries (all active genes in a cell)

13
Probes Used for ID of DNA
  • Probe
  • A fragment of DNA labeled with a tracer
  • Used to find a specific clone carrying DNA of
    interest in a library of many clones
  • Nucleic acid hybridization
  • Base pairing between DNA from different sources
  • A probe hybridizes with the targeted gene

14
Big-Time DNA Amplification PCR
  • Polymerase chain reaction (PCR)
  • A cycled reaction that uses a heat-tolerant form
    of DNA polymerase (Taq polymerase) to produce
    billions of copies of a DNA fragment
  • This is how a single drop of blood at a crime
    scene can become expanded to enough to make
    necessary tests and still be available for future
    testing if needed

15
PCR in Overview
  • DNA to be copied is mixed with DNA polymerase,
    nucleotides and primers that base-pair with
    certain DNA sequences
  • Cycles of high and low temperatures break and
    reform hydrogen bonds between DNA strands,
    doubling the amount of DNA in each cycle

16
PCR Steps to More
17
16.2 Key Concepts Needles in Haystacks
  • Researchers manipulate targeted genes by
    isolating and making many copies of particular
    DNA fragments

18
16.3 DNA Sequencing
  • DNA sequencing reveals the order of nucleotide
    bases in a fragment of DNA

19
DNA Sequencing
  • DNA is synthesized with normal nucleotides and
    dideoxynucleotides tagged with different colors
  • When a tagged base is added, DNA synthesis stops
    fragments of all lengths are made
  • Electrophoresis separates the fragments of DNA,
    each ending with a tagged base, by length
  • Order of colored bases is the sequence of DNA
  • Finished sequence is basis for comparison

20
DNA Sequencing
21
16.4 DNA Fingerprinting
  • One individual can be distinguished from all
    others on the basis of DNA fingerprints
  • Confidence here in results is extremely high, in
    the usually stated range of one in many millions

22
DNA Fingerprints
  • DNA fingerprint
  • A unique array of DNA sequences used to identify
    individuals
  • Short tandem repeats (STRs)
  • Many copies of the same 2- to 10-base-pair
    sequences in a series along a chromosome
  • Types and numbers of STRs vary greatly among
    individuals

23
Creating DNA Fingerprints
  • PCR is used to amplify DNA from regions of
    several chromosomes that have STRs
  • Electrophoresis is used to separate the fragments
    and create a unique DNA fingerprint
  • DNA fingerprints have many applications
  • Legal cases, forensics, population studies

24
DNA Fingerprints Forensics Case Example
You are on the jury. You are shown this prepared
comparison of DNA fingerprints, with ID as
shown. See if you can match suspect with sample
from the crime scene.
25
16.3-16.4 Key Concepts Deciphering DNA Fragments
  • Sequencing reveals the linear order of
    nucleotides in a fragment of DNA
  • A DNA fingerprint is an individuals unique array
    of DNA sequences

26
16.5 Studying Genomes
  • Comparing the sequence of our genome with that of
    other species is giving us insights into how the
    human body works
  • You already know of 98 percent same human
    sequences with that of chimpanzes
  • How about 49 percent the same between a banana
    and a human?

27
The Human Genome Project
  • Automated DNA sequencing and PCR allowed human
    genome projects to sequence the 3 billion bases
    in the human genome
  • 28,976 genes have been identified, but not all of
    their products or functions are known
  • As of 2010, distinct gene numbers down to about
    23,000 by best estimates from work

28
Sequencing the Human Genome
Computers have greatly speeded process up and
also increased accuracy.
29
Genomics is a Growing Application
  • Genomics The study of genomes
  • Structural genomics
  • Comparative genomics
  • Analysis of the human genome yields new
    information about genes and how they work
  • Applications in medicine and other fields
  • Example APOA5 mutations and triglycerides

30
DNA Chips Have a Future
  • DNA chips
  • Microarrays of many different DNA samples
    arranged on a glass plate
  • Used to compare patterns of gene expression among
    cells of different types or under different
    conditions
  • May be used to screen for genetic abnormalities,
    pathogens, or cancer

31
16.6 Genetic Engineering
  • Genetic engineering
  • A laboratory process by which deliberate changes
    are introduced into an individuals genome
  • Todays most common genetically modified
    organisms are bacteria and yeast
  • Are used in research, medicine, and industry
  • Example production of human insulin

32
GMOs Now and Later
  • Genetically modified organisms (GMOs)
  • Individuals containing modified genes from the
    same species or a different species
  • Future will have major control problems as the
    developer of GMO usually patents process/result
  • Transgenic organisms
  • Individuals containing genes transferred from a
    different species (also GMOs)
  • Example Bacteria with jellyfish genes

33
16.7 Designer Plants by GM
  • Genetically engineered crop plants are widespread
    in the United States
  • But can their designed change(s) jump to other
    plant life or end up incorporated in animals
    eating the modified plants?

34
The Ti Plasmid a GMO Mechanism
  • Ti plasmid
  • Plasmid of bacteria Agrobacterium tumefaciens
  • Contains tumor-inducing (Ti) genes
  • Used as a vector to transfer foreign or modified
    genes into plants, including some food crops

35
Ti Plasmid Transfer Steps
36
Genetically Engineered Plants
  • Crop plants are genetically modified to produce
    more food at lower cost
  • Resistance to disease or herbicides
  • Increased yield
  • Plants that make pesticides (Bt protein gene)
  • Drought resistance

37
GMO Controversies
  • 73 GMO crops are approved for use in US, with
    hundreds more pending
  • Corn, sorghum, cotton, soy, canola, alfalfa
  • Big problem of just a few companies doing nearly
    all the research and manufacturing can lead to
    a monopoly problem in future
  • Facts and controversy real life
  • In crops engineered for herbicide resistance,
    weeds are becoming resistant to herbicides
  • Engineered genes are spreading into wild plants
    and nonengineered crops

38
Some Genetically Modified Plants
39
16.8 Biotech Barnyards
  • Animals that would be impossible to produce by
    traditional breeding methods are being created by
    genetic engineering
  • This can be really good for endangered animals
  • Genetically engineered animals are used in
    research, medicine, and industry

40
Of Mice and Men
  • 1982 The first transgenic animals mice with
    genes for rat growth hormone

41
Examples of Transgenic Animals
  • Genetically modified animals are used as models
    of many human diseases
  • Mice used in knockout experiments
  • Genetically modified animals make proteins with
    medical and industrial applications
  • Goats and rabbits that make human proteins
  • Farms animals with desirable characteristics

42
Some Genetically Modified Animals
That silly-looking featherless chicken is easily
the most commercially viable possibility shown
here. It would eliminate a costly part of chicken
processing and could enable very warm climate
poultry farms.
43
Knockout Cells and Organ Factories
  • Transgenic pigs with human proteins are a
    potential source of organs and tissues for
    transplants in humans
  • May prevent rejection by immune system
  • Xenotransplantation
  • Transplantation of a tissue or organ from one
    species to another
  • Pig heart valves used for many years.

44
16.10 Modified Humans?
  • We as a society continue to work our way through
    the ethical implications of applying new DNA
    technologies
  • The manipulation of individual genomes continues
    even as we are weighing the risks and benefits of
    this research

45
Gene Therapy Helping the Individual
  • Gene therapy
  • Transfer of recombinant DNA into body cells to
    correct a genetic defect or treat a disease
  • Viral vectors or lipid clusters insert an
    unmutated gene into an individuals chromosomes
  • Examples Cystic fibrosis, SCID-X1

46
Getting Better by Gene Therapy
  • 1998 A viral vector was used to insert unmutated
    IL2RG genes into boys with severe combined
    immunodeficiency disease (SCID-X1) most
    recovered immune function

47
Getting Worse by Gene Therapy
  • No one can predict where a virus-injected gene
    will insert into a chromosome several boys from
    the SCID-X1 study developed cancer
  • In other studies, severe allergic reactions to
    the viral vector itself have resulted in death

48
Getting Perfect Over Time
  • Eugenic engineering
  • Engineering humans for particular desirable
    traits, not associated with treatment of
    disorders

49
16.6-16.10 Key Concepts Using the New
Technologies of GM
  • Genetic engineering, the directed modification of
    an organisms genes, is now used in research, and
    it is being tested in medical applications
  • Many questions must be answered about the ethics
    and consequences of manipulating the human genome
    some of these can be answered by our government
    but many will remain answerable only by the
    individual as he or she agrees to their usage
    personally.
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