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What is Biotechnology?

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Title: What is Biotechnology?


1
What is Biotechnology?
2
What is Biotechnology?
General Definition
The application of technology to improve a
biological organism
Detailed Definition
The application of the technology to modify the
biological function of an organism by adding
genes from another organisms
3
What About the Term Genetic Engineering?
Genetic engineering is the basic tool set of
biotechnology
Genetic engineering involves
  • Isolating genes
  • Modifying genes so they function better
  • Preparing genes to be inserted into a new
    species
  • Developing transgenes

4
What is a transgenic?
Concept Based on the Term Transgene
Transgene the genetically engineered gene added
to a species
Ex. modified EPSP synthase gene (encodes a
protein that functions even when plant is treated
with Roundup)
Transgenic an organism containing a transgene
introduced by technological (not breeding)
methods
Ex. Roundup Ready Crops
5
Biotechnology Terms You Probably Heard
Transgene the foreign gene added to a species
Ex. modified EPSP synthase gene (encodes a
protein that functions even when plant treated
with Roundup)
Transgenic an organism containing a transgene
introduced by technological (not breeding)
methods
Ex. Roundup Ready Crops
6
Biotechnology Develops
GMOs - Genetically modified organisms
  • GMO - an organism that expresses traits that
    result
  • from the introduction of foreign DNA
  • Also called transgenic organism

7
Important Terms
  • Breeding
  • Beneficial gene added from the same species
  • Gene delivered by mating within the species

Source USDA
  • Transformation
  • Beneficial gene added from another species
  • Gene delivered by plant genetic engineering

Source USDA
8
Lets Be Up Front
  • Breeding ? Biotechnology
  •  Breeding only exchanges genes found in the
    species.
  • Breeding can transfer the transgene to other
    breeding materials
  •  BUT it is not the same as biotechnology.
  • Biotechnology adds traits not available in the
    species
  •  Soybean does not have a gene to breakdown
    Roundup
  • The gene comes from bacteria

9
What are the structures in molecular genetics?
  • Molecular genetics study of genes and how they
    are expressed.
  • Chromosome part of cell nucleus that contains
    heredity information and promotes protein
    synthesis.
  • Gene basic unit of heredity on a chromosome.
  • DNA molecule in a chromosome that codes genetic
    information.

10
Interspecific Cross
Wheat
Rye
X
Triticale
New species, but NOT biotechnology
products
11
Mutagenesis New Trait, No Foreign Gene
  • Mutagenesis changes the sequence of a gene
  • New, useful traits can be obtained

Mutagenesis Treatment
Susceptible Normal Gene
ATTCGA
Resistant Mutant Gene
ATTGGA
12
Transformation Cassettes
Contains
13
Transformation Steps
Prepare tissue for transformation
Introduce DNA
  • Agrobacterium or gene gun

Culture plant tissue
Field test the plants
  • Multiple sites, multiple years

14
Delivering the Gene to the Plant
  • Transformation cassettes are developed in the lab
  • They are then introduced into a plant
  • Two major delivery methods

15
The Next Test Is The Field
Herbicide Resistance
16
Final Test of the Transgenic Consumer Acceptance
RoundUp Ready Corn
17
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18
Crop Biotech Market Dominated By Four Countriesa
6 3.2 mha
68 35.7 mha
3 1.5 mha
22 11.8 mha
Total 99 of market
a2001 growing season data.
19
Agriculture Products On the Market
Insect resistant cotton
  • Bt toxin kills the cotton boll worm
  • toxin gene from a bacteria

Source USDA
Insect resistant corn
  • Bt toxin kills the European corn borer
  • toxin gene from a bacteria
  • Rootworm GM approved (2/26/03)

Normal
Transgenic
20
Herbicide resistant crops
  • current soybean, corn, canola
  • coming sugarbeet, lettuce, strawberry,
  • alfalfa, potato, wheat (2005)
  • resistance gene from bacteria

Source Monsanto
Virus resistance
  • papaya, squash, potato
  • resistance gene from a virus

21
Economic Effect of Bt Cotton In China
  • 200/acre increase in income
  • 750 million increase nationally

22
EU Labeling Regulations
  • Foods with less than 0.9 of GM gene product
  • Labeling not required
  • Products derived from a GM crop
  • Labeling required
  • Applies even if the product does not contain the
    GM
  • gene product
  • Ex Corn syrup does not have the Bt protein,
    but must
  • be labeled
  • Animal feeds from GM crops
  • Same guidelines apply

23
What Are the Public Concerns?
Economics Are we changing the economics on the
farm? Environmental Are we irreversibly
modifying the environment?   Globalization Is
technology becoming centralized in too few hands?
  Social Will we develop a class of genetic
outcasts? Religious Are we playing God?
24
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25
Benefits of Plant Biotechnology
  1. Greater production efficiencies It can help
    plant breeders improve a crops yield
  1. Less chemical damage
  1. Hardier plants it leads to produce plants that
    will resist diseases and unfavorable weather
    conditions.
  1. Improved food quality.
  1. New crops
  1. Improved protection against human and animal
    diseases

26
Concerns associated with GM crops
  • Possible production of allergenic or toxic
    proteins not native to the crop.
  • 2. Adverse effects on non-target organisms,
    especially pollinators and biological control
    organisms.
  • 3. Loss of biodiversity.
  • 4. Genetic pollution (unwanted transfer of genes
    to other species).
  • 5. Development of pest resistance.
  • 6. Global concentration of economic power and
    food production.
  • 7. Lack of "right-to-know" (i.e., a desire for
    labeling transgenic foods).

27
File to support registration of new crop variety-
conventional breeding
28
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29
Biological systems for transformation
30
  1. Agrobacterium tumefaciens
  • Agrobacteria are soil bacteria.
  • They naturally infect dicotyledonous plants.
  • Because host range is limited, procedure has not
    been used for some major crops such as corn,
    wheat, rice, etc.
  • Life cycle of Agrobacterium involves living in
    the soil until it encounters a plant and then
    infecting the plant.
  • Infection causes a rapid proliferation of plant
    cells around the infection leading to formation
    of a crown gall tumor

31
  • For Agrobacterium hizogenes, masses of roots
    emerge from the gall forming hairy root disease.
  • Once the gall is produces, it provides a haven
    for the bacteria to proliferate.
  • To obtain food, the bacteria also subjugates the
    plant to produce an unusual class of compounds
    called opines.
  • Opines are condensation products of the amino
    acid arginine and carbon compounds present in the
    Kreb cycle.
  • Most common are octopine and nopaline. Opines
    cannot be metabolized by host plant but are used
    by the bacterium for food and amino acids.

32
  • Disease caused by the action of a plasmid in
    Agrobacterium called the Ti plasmid (Ti Tumor
    Inducing).
  • Ti plasmid is a large circular plasmid, 180 kbp
    in size.
  • Only one present in each bacterial cell.
  • Ti plasmid contains several regions of
    importance
  • 1)  Transfer or T-DNA Is a region of the plasmid
    that is transferred from the bacteria to the host
    plant cell during the infection process.
  • Once in the host, it becomes stably integrated in
    one of the host's chromosomes.
  • T-DNA is 25-kbp long bracketed by two 25-bp
    direct repeats called left and right borders.

33
Ti plasmid
34
  • Between the borders are several genes
  • Isopentyl adenine transferase (IPT) synthesizes
    cytokinins.
  • Tryptophan monooxygenase
  • Indoleacetamide hydrogenase both enzymes
    involved in the biosynthesis of the auxin,
    indoleacetic acid.
  • Gene for synthesis of a specific type of opine,
    either the octopine or nopaline type.
  • The first three genes are involved in making the
    plant hormones, cytokinin and auxin.
  • Massive production of these hormones at the site
    of infection causes the surrounding plant cells
    to divide and create the gall tumor.

35
  • 2) virulence or vir region Region that contains
    many genes required for the infection process.
  • Important ones are vir A, B, C, D1, D2, E, G, and
    pin F that are required for the transfer and
    integration of the T-DNA into host.
  • Vir region does not have to be physically
    connected to the T-DNA region can work in trans
    on a separate plasmid. 
  • Basis for the construction of binary Ti plasmids.
  • 3)  Replication origin for Agrobacterium.
  • 4) Genes responsible for opine metabolism Allows
    Agrobacterium to metabolize opines back into
    arginine and carbon compounds.

36
Course of events during Agrobacterium infection
  • Agrobacterium present in the soil detects dicot
    plants susceptible to infection by the secretion
    of polyphenols from the roots or from wound
    sites.
  • Since such wounds are a site of easy infection by
    bacteria, so they use the polyphenol signal to
    identify good targets.
  • Bacteria move up chemical gradient of polyphenols
    to find the plant.

37
  • Polyphenols binds to a receptor encoded by vir A
    gene.
  • Binding activates vir A which then activates the
    vir G protein by phosphorylation.
  • Both vir A and G are constitutively expressed.
  • Vir G protein is a transcription factor which
    then initiates transcription of the rest of vir
    genes on Ti Plasmid as well as vir genes on the
    Agrobacterium chromosome (CHV genes).
  • Specific vir gene products then cut T DNA at left
    and right borders (Vir D1, D2, C).
  • Single stranded copies of the T DNA region are
    synthesized, creating the T-strand.

38
  1. T-strand is coated with single stranded DNA
    binding proteins (Vir E) and the ss DNA/Vir E
    complex is shuttled out of the bacterium and
    transferred to plant cell where it is integrated
    in the host chromosome. Process similar to
    bacterial conjugation.
  2. Once integrated in the plant chromosome, T-DNA
    genes become active, producing the oncogenic
    proteins for the synthesis of auxins and
    cytokinins, thus forcing the cells to
    proliferate. The opine synthesis enzyme is also
    produced and the manufactured opines are used as
    food for bacteria.

39
  • Life cycle of Agrobacterium make it a perfect
    vehicle for the stable introduction of foreign
    DNA into plants.
  • Method involves insertion of DNA to be introduced
    between left and right borders of T-DNA and then
    infect the plant.
  • Early methods used natural Ti plasmids that
    contained the oncogenes for hormone biosynthesis
    and the opine bosynthesis genes.
  • Created transformed plants but presence of
    oncogenes caused plants to remain as galls
    (Hardly useful as a crop).

40
Newer methods for transformation use highly
modified version of the Ti-plasmid
  1. Are disarmed ("non-obcogenic") by deletion of the
    oncogenes.
  2. Ti-plasmid is divided into two plasmids, a larger
    one containing the vir region and a smaller one
    containing only the T-DNA region. 
  1. Smaller T-DNA plasmid contains two replication
    origins, one for E. coli and one for
    Agrobacterium, and antibiotic resistance gene for
    selection in E. coli and Agrobacterium. 
  2. All natural genes are removed from the between
    the T-DNA borders (including those for opines)
    and replaced with a multiple cloning site to
    faciliatate insertion of your gene, and a
    selectable marker. Some plasmids also contain
    reporters in the T-DNA region.

41
Transformation with Ti plasmids involves
  1. Preparation of Ti plasmid containing the gene to
    be transferred.
  2. Incubate with plant tissue wounded in some way to
    facilitate entry of bacterium into the plant.
  3. Plating leaf section on media containing
  1. Antibiotic to kill remaining Agrobacterium.
  2. Balance of plant hormones to allow leaf cells to
    divide and form callus tissue.
  3. Suitable toxin (e.g., kanamycin,
    phosphinothricin) to kill all cells that begin
    dividing that are not transformed and thus do not
    contain the NPT II gene (Process called
    selection).

42
  1. Transferring individual callus onto appropriate
    media with right hormone balance to allow
    regeneration of callus cells into intact plants.
  2. Transformed plants will be hemizygous for
    inserted gene. Self pollination with convert some
    progeny into homozygous transformed lines.

43
Problems with the use of Agrobacterium for
transformation
  1. Same DNA between T-DNA borders can be inserted
    into multiple chromosomal regions of the
    transformed plants. Easy to get as many as 10
    copies inserted during a single transformation.
    Makes generating of homozygous plant difficult.
  2. Only able to transform dicotyledonous plants with
    sufficient efficiency. Attempts to expand the
    host range of bacterium has met with little
    success.

44
Direct transfer of DNA in plant cells
  1. Electroporation
  • Electroporation involves the use of electrical
    discharges to make cell leaky.
  • Leaks then provide avenues for DNA to enter cell.
  • Technique cannot transport DNA across cell wall
    so it must be removed to generate protoplasts.
  • Cell wall removed by fungal enzymes that
    specialize in digesting cellulose, pectins and
    other cell wall polymers.
  • Once missing the cell wall, protoplast are very
    fragile and sensitive to osmotic shock.

45
  • Protoplasts are mixed with DNA to be introduced
    and placed in a cuvette lined with two
    electrodes.
  • Both stable and transient expression increased as
    DNA concentration is increased. Electric shock
    (200-400 V) is given for 50-100 msec.
  • Cuvettes are cooled to reduce heat.
  • Then the protoplasts are allowed to recovered and
    regenerate their cell wall.
  • When placed on hormone media containing a toxin
    suitable for selection only those cells that are
    transformed will multiply producing calli (stable
    transformants).
  • Electroporation was the first technique to
    transform cereals like corn.

46
Advantages
  1. Works for any plant species and cell type.
  2. Provides quick and accurate data on expression
    using transient assays.
  3. Can test to see if a particular gene you have
    created will work once stably integrated without
    having to wait to regenerate a transgenic plant.
  4. Delivery of the DNA is quick and relatively
    inexpensive so you can do lots of tests.

47
Problems You need to produce protoplasts first.
Since for many species, you cannot regenerate
easily intact fertile plants from protoplasts,
this method may be not suitable for producing
stably transformed plants.
48
  1. Microprojectile bombardment
  • Technique developed by Sanford at Cornell and the
    patent was sold to DuPont.
  • It is a technique for the delivery of DNA in
    intact plant cells using DNA-coated particles
    accelerated to high velocities.
  • Such particles have enough momentum to penetrate
    the cell wall and become lodged inside cells. 
  • Following bombardment, cells repair the holes and
    can survive.
  • To penetrate the cell wall, particles must have
    sufficient momentum (p). Because p mv, the
    faster and heavier the particle the better.

49
  • Small (10 uM diameter) particles made with dense
    metals such as tungsten or gold are used.
  • Particles coated with naked DNA (usually plasmids
    containing the gene to be inserted) are made by
    mixing the bead with a solution containing the
    DNA and then the solution is dried.
  • Usually the plasmid contains both a selectable
    marker and the DNA of interest. 
  • Once particles are lodged in the cells, the
    DNA/RNA will dissolve.
  • The RNA can be directly translated, and DNA can
    be transcribe and translated

50
  • If the particles carrying DNA become lodged in
    the nucleus, the released DNA can stably
    integrate into the host chromosomes (stable
    transformation).
  • Occurs at a very low frequency, so a strong
    selection is necessary.
  • Since the individual cells that become
    transformed must regenerate into a whole plant,
    tissue culture cells, callus, and embryonic cells
    are typically used.

51
  • If the particles carrying DNA become lodged in
    the nucleus, the released DNA can stably
    integrate into the host chromosomes (stable
    transformation).
  • Occurs at a very low frequency, so a strong
    selection is necessary.
  • Since the individual cells that become
    transformed must regenerate into a whole plant,
    tissue culture cells, callus, and embryonic cells
    are typically used.

52
  • Advantages
  • Bombardment is able to penetrate intact cells
    thus avoiding the need to remove the cell wall.
  • It can work with any plant species.
  • It was the first reliable technique to work with
    soybeans and moncots such as corn and rice.

53
  • Problems
  • You need to be able to regenerate whole plant
    from the single bombarded cell.
  • If complex tissue is used for bombardment, you
    can get chimeric plants containing both
    transformed and non-transformed tissue.
  • Expensive.

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