Title: Genetic Engineering and Recombinant DNA
1Genetic Engineering and Recombinant DNA
2Genetic Engineering and Recombinant DNA
- The Origin of Genetic Engineering
- Biotechnology - the use of living organisms for
practical purposes. - While many believe that biotechnology is a novel
concept, it actually began about 10,000 years ago
when human populations began selecting and
breeding useful plants, animals, fungi, and
microorganisms.
While the early biotechnology techniques were
relatively simple, modern genetic engineers move
genes among all kinds of organisms, including
humans, mice, tomatoes, yeasts, and bacteria.
3- Knowing Biochemical Pathways Helps Molecular
Biologists Design Useful Organisms - Today, the knowledge of biochemical pathways in
some organisms allows biologists to predict what
type of mutation will produce a desired trait.
With this in mind, molecular biologists have been
successful in designing useful organisms by
inserting or destroying genes that code for
proteins involved in specific biochemical
pathways.
What are some examples of this technology?
4- Knowing Biochemical Pathways Helps Molecular
Biologists Design Useful Organisms - For example, Calgene in central California
deliberately damaged the gene that controls
ethylene production in tomatoes. - Eythlene is responsible for fruit ripening.
- Since these tomatoes do not produce ethylene,
they will only ripen after the tomato distributor
sprays them with ethylene. - This prevents the tomatoes from being picked
before they have developed their flavor
components.
Such tomatoes are termed Flavor-Saver tomatoes.
5- How Do Restriction Enzymes Cut Up a Genome?
- DNA can be cut with special enzymes termed
endonucleases. - Endonucleases recognize specific sequences of
nucleotides and sever the DNA at these sites. - Endonucleases evolved in bacterial cells as a
defense against bacteriophages (bacterial
viruses). - When phage DNA enters a bacteria, endonucleases
break down the phage DNA (by cutting) in order to
restrict viral replication. - Since endonucleases restrict viral replication,
they have become known as Restriction Enzymes.
6- How Do Restriction Enzymes Cut Up a DNA?
- Restriction enzymes recognize and cut DNA that
is foreign to the bacterial cell. - The DNA of the bacterial cell is chemically
modified to prevent attack by restriction
enzymes. - Restriction Enzymes, therefore, chop-up
foreign DNA, while leaving the DNA of the
bacterial cell unaffected.
7- How Do Restriction Enzymes Recognize sites for
severing? -
- Since their discovery in 1962, hundreds of
restriction enzymes have been identified and
isolated from bacterial cells. - These restriction enzymes are extremely specific
and work by recognizing short nucleotide
sequences in DNA molecules termed RECOGNITION
SEQUENCES. - Once these sequences are detected, the
restriction enzyme severs the DNA at this point.
8- EXAMPLE
- Hae III cuts at the following recognition
sequence - GGCC
- CCGG
- Hae III will cut the DNA every time the above
recognition sequence is detected. - The result is a matching set of restriction
fragments. - Restriction fragments are pieces of DNA that
begin and end with a restriction site.
9Hae What?
Hae III cuts the DNA each time the recognition
sequence repeats itself within a DNA sample.
10- Mapping
- A comparison of restriction fragment sizes
allows biologists to construct a restriction map. - Restriction maps demonstrate how the restriction
sites are placed within a piece of DNA. - More importantly, biologists can join these
fragments into new combinations. - For example, human and mouse fragments can be
joined together.
11DNA Fingerprinting
Example Suppose Joes DNA has four restriction
sites for EcoR1
EcoR1 will, therefore, cut Joes DNA four times
_______________________________________________
5 fragments result from the action of EcoR1when
applied to Joes DNA What is the restriction site
for EcoR1?
12DNA Fingerprinting
Example Suppose Anisas DNA has 3 restriction
sites for EcoR1.
EcoR1 will, therefore, cut Anisas DNA three
times.
_______________________________________________
4 DNA segments result
13Restriction Enzyme DNA Fragments
EcoR1 cuts Joes DNA into 5 fragments and Anisas
into 4.
Joe
Anisa
Note In addition to differing in fragment
number, the size of the fragments differs as
well. Why is this significant?
14- These fragments can now be separated from one
another using ELECTROPHORESIS - DNA electrophoresis utilizes an agarose gel and
a voltage current to separate the cut DNA
fragments from one another. - The DNA samples are placed into the agarose gel
(a medium in which the DNA fragments will travel)
and the voltage current separates the fragments. - How?
15Gel Electrophoresis
-
Joes DNA
Anisas DNA
The current is applied and the fragments travel
to the end due to the negatively charged DNA
(phosphate).
16Analysis
Smaller DNA fragments will travel farther on the
gel than larger DNA fragments.
17Fingerprinting
- Since every individual has a unique sequence of
bases in their DNA, a unique banding pattern will
be generated by electrophoresis for each
individual. - This is known as a GENETIC FINGERPRINT.
- NOTE Even if two individuals have the same
number of restriction sites in their DNA, the
size of each fragment will differ and will,
therefore, yield a unique banding pattern. - The next slide presents an example
18Forensics
Who did it?
Where is the heaviest band?
Where is the lightest band?
All 4 samples are cut with the same restriction
enzyme.
How many restriction sites does the DNA
from suspect 1 have?
19- How Do Molecular Biologists Use Recombinant DNA?
- Recombinant DNA - a DNA molecule consisting of
two or more DNA segments that are not found
together in nature. - For example, the next slide demonstrates how
cells from a tobacco plant are infected with a
plasmid carrying a gene for herbicide
resistance. The herbicide resistant cells
grow into mature plants which produce seeds
containing the resistant gene.
20Genetic Engineering and Recombinant DNA
How Do Molecular Biologists Use Recombinant DNA?
21- How Do Molecular Biologists Use Recombinant DNA?
- Recombinant DNA has provided scientists with
- 1) a tool for studying structure, regulation and
function of individual genes - 2)a tool for unraveling the molecular bases of
molecular diseases - 3)the ability to turn organisms into factories
that turn out vast quantities of product
(protein or other substance) that these organisms
would never make on their own.
22- How Do Molecular Biologists Join Restriction
Fragments Together? - Two pieces of DNA from different sources can be
linked together by the enzyme DNA ligase. - DNA ligase is normally used during DNA
replication. - DNA ligase is responsible for the linkage of
separate pieces of DNA into one continuous strand.
23Ligase
This image demonstrates how ligase can be used to
link human and mouse DNA together as well
as the insertion of the human insulin gene into
a plasmid causing the bacteria to produce
insulin.
24- How Do Molecular Biologists Express Recombinant
DNA in Bacteria and Other Hosts? - Molecular biologists face two serious challenges
- 1) To produce large numbers of particular
genes. - 2) To induce host cells to express recombinant
genes as usable proteins.
25- How Can Bacteria Be Induced To Make Great Numbers
of Copies of a Gene? - Biologists achieve this goal with the use of
plasmids. - Plasmids allow bacterial cells to produce large
numbers of copies of a single gene. - Using DNA ligase, researchers can link any gene
to a plasmid which carries recombinant DNA into
cells. - Plasmids are an example of a vector.
- A vector is anything that spreads genes from one
organism to another.
26- How Can Bacteria Be Induced To Make Eukaryotic
Genes? - Eukaryotic DNA contains introns which are base
sequences in the pre-mRNA that are not expressed
and normally removed by the eukaryotic cell
before the mRNA is translated. - Bacterial cells are prokaryotic and, therefore,
do not have the required enzymes to recognize and
remove the introns. - If they cannot remove introns, they cannot make
a mRNA molecule that is translateable and,
therefore, cannot directly make eukaryotic genes.
27- How Can Bacteria Be Induced To Make Eukaryotic
Genes? - The solution of intron removal in bacterial
cells comes from the action of retroviruses. - Recall that retroviruses contain reverse
transcriptase which allows the conversion of RNA
to DNA. - Researchers can take mature mRNA (introns have
already been removed) and copy it back to DNA
with the use of reverse transcriptase. - The resulting DNA is termed complementary DNA
(cDNA) and, unlike the genomic DNA, it has no
introns.
28The image to the left demonstrates how reverse
transcriptase is used to copy mature insulin mRNA
into DNA.
This DNA can now be joined to a plasmid vector
and expressed by a bacterium.
29- Can Host Cells Be Induced To Express Polypeptides
in a Usable Form? - Unfortunately, not all eukaryotic genes can be
expressed in bacteria. - Such genes code for proteins that must be
modified after translation. - For example, most membrane proteins require
modifications that can only be made in eukaryotic
hosts.
30- How Do Researchers Make Multiple Copies of
Recombinant DNA? - Researchers need enormous quantities of a gene
in order to sequence it, detect mutations or
study how proteins interact with the gene to
influence gene expression. - Cloning and PCR (Polymerase Chain Reaction)
allow researchers to make millions of copies of a
particular gene.
31How Do Researchers Make Multiple Copies of
Recombinant DNA?
Cloning simply involves the introduction of a
single recombinantDNA (gene and plasmid) molecule
into a bacterial host cell.
The plasmid can induce the host cell to make many
copies of the gene it carries and, in addition,
researchers can induce the bacterial cell to
divide rapidly.
As the bacteria divide, the recombinant DNA
multiplies.
32- PCR allows researchers to produce multiple
numbers of individual DNA sequences in a very
short period of time. - In PCR
- The selected DNA segment is heated causing the
two strands to separate. - The DNA is cooled and two short nucleotide
sequences termed primers bind to the
complementary DNA strands. - DNA polymerase then copies each strand until the
researcher stops the reaction by again raising
the temperature. - Increasing the temperature repeats the process.
33- How Do Biologists Find the Right DNA Sequence in
a Recombinant DNA Library? - A gene library is a collection of restriction
fragments from a single genome. - Such a library is only useful to researchers if
they can find the gene they are interested in.
34- Two tools are used to find specific genes
- 1) hybridization probes - short segments of
single stranded DNA that binds to and detects the
gene in question. - 2) antibodies - detect and bind with specific
proteins in colonies of bacteria containing
recombinant DNA.
The following slides demonstrates the use of
each technique.
35Genetic Engineering and Recombinant DNA
Note that the hybridization probe locates
specific DNA sequences while antibodies locate
the protein product of the same sequence.
Figure 13-4
36- Genetically Engineered Bacteria and Eukaryotic
Cells Can Make Useful Proteins -
- Genetic reprogramming using recombinant DNA
technology allows the production of an
extraordinary number of products. - For example
- insulin
- growth hormone
- ingredients for processed foods
- enzymes used to produce valuable molecules or
destroy pollutants - enzymes in laundry soap
- Vaccines
- New proteins researchers are currently
developing new antibodies that can interfere
with disease processes
37- Gene Therapy
- Products of Recombinant DNA Can Be Released
Directly into the Body from Engineered Somatic
Cells - Gene Therapy - The insertion of therapeutic
genes into an individual so that their products
act to modulate a particular phenotype. - One strategy associated with gene therapy
involves the removal of cells from the body,
engineering them to produce the desired effect,
and then implanting them back into the body of
the individual. - For example, researchers are now experimenting
with the insertion of genes for clotting factor
into cells that are then implanted into
individuals suffering from hemophilia. - This allows the body to produce clotting factor
and alleviate symptoms associated with
hemophilia.
38- RECOMBINANT DNA CAN GENETICALLY ALTER ANIMALS AND
PLANTS - Organisms that carry recombinant DNA are termed
transgenic organisms and the added DNA is termed
a transgene.
39- How Do Researchers Produce a Transgenic Mammal?
-
- For a gene to be expressed, researchers must put
the transgene into the zygote before the
beginning of embryonic development. - If this is performed successfully, all of the
cells of the organism will contain the desired
DNA. - To date, researchers have been successful in
producing transgenic mice, pigs, goats, and sheep.
40- How Do Researchers Produce a Transgenic Mammal?
- The engineering of transgenic animals faces
serious obstacles - 1) they must be made one at a time
- 2) in knockouts (animals in which a particular
gene has been inactivated), recombinant genes are
inserted at random and may not function as
researchers hope. - In spite of these obstacles, such animals can
provide clues about how previously mysterious
proteins function in the body.
41- The Genetic Engineering of Plants Is Easier Than
That of Animals - Plant advantages
- 1) they are easier to clone than animal cells
- 2) they can be grown in vast fields which allows
massive production of desired products - 3) they have the potential to be extremely
lucrative. - ex If the Flavor-Saver tomato becomes popular,
the inventors will gain a virtual monopoly in the
tomato market. - Molecular biologists can genetically engineer
plants that can - synthesize animal or plant proteins
- resist herbicides
- resist infection by plant viruses.
42- What Are the Environmental Risks of Recombinant
DNA? - The long-term consequences are unknown.
- Some argue that severe ecological effects will
result. - For example, genetically engineered plants may
eventually transfer their engineered genes into
other plants. - Will pesticide resistant genes inserted into a
crop plant be transferred to unrelated pest
plants creating herbicide resistant weeds?
43- The Application of Recombinant DNA Technology
Poses Moral Questions for Society - Diagnosis of genetic disease is far in advance
of treatment. - Under such a situation, people may know that they
have a genetic disease, but will not be able to
do anything about it. - Will biologists try to modify genes that affect
characteristics other than those responsible for
disease? - Will future societies try to produce more
intelligent citizens? - Will future societies try to produce fewer
aggressive people?