Title: Genetic Engineering
1Genetic Engineering
2What is Genetic Engineering?
- basic definition genetic engineering is the
direct manipulation of an organism's genes. - Genetic Engineering is useful in many fields
including food production and medicine. - While it seems promising, there is still a lot
that we do not know about Genetic Engineering.
3Gregor Mendel
- Gregor Mendel lived from 1822-1884 in Brunn,
Austria. - He was an Augustinian Monk who taught natural
science to high school students.
4The Father of Genetics
- Mendel was the first person to trace the
characteristics of successive generations of
living things. - Mendel wondered how plants acquired atypical
characteristics. - Mendel performed experiments on pea plants, mice
and ornamental plants.
5Dominance and segregation of traits
- Mendel crossed peas and mice of different
varieties. - Through this experiment Mendel discovered the
phenomena of dominance and segregation. - Dominance decides which characteristic most often
surfaces the dominant characteristic overrides
the recessive gene and appears in the organism. - Segregation of genes decides which genes are
inherited from the parents.
6Laws of Heredity
- Heredity factors do not combine they are passed
intact - Ex A child of parents with black and red hair
would inherit one of the two colors not a mix of
the two. - Each member of the parental generation transmits
half of its hereditary factors to each offspring - Different sets of offspring from the same parents
receive different sets of hereditary factors - Ex siblings are not identical, their differences
come from the inheritance of different genes from
their parents.
7(No Transcript)
8DNA
- Discovered in 1869
- James Watson and Francis Crick discovered that
DNA had a double Helix form. - Our DNA or genes decide who we are, they decide
everything from our eye color to our shoe size.
9DNA Engineering
- We use recombinant DNA to manipulate genes.
- Recombinant DNA is taking DNA from one source and
inserting into another organisms DNA giving that
being those characteristics. - Ex. Inserting salmons anti-freezing genes into
corn to allow it to survive frost.
10Process of DNA Engineering
- 1. Restriction enzymes cut DNA at their base
parts causing sticky ends to form. - 2. DNA ligase (linker sequences of DNA) are
placed on the sticky ends of the DNA. - 3. A Plasmid holding foreign DNA is inserted into
the DNA and is connected by the ligase. (sticky
end to sticky end) - 4. The recombinant DNA is inserted into a
bacterium which carries out its function inside
the larger organism. - 5. When the DNA becomes active it directs the
body to construct distinct proteins which carry
out the genes function.
11Examples of Genetic Engineering
Spider Silk
- Creation of artificial spider silk by Nexia, a
biotech company - Spider silk protein created by goats in their
milk, then spun into silk - However, still not comparable to actual
spidersilk
12Insulin
- Insulinoriginally isolated from cows and pigs
- 1982 Humulin, a biosynthetic human insulin
- Attempting to optimize insulin production by
expressing them in different things - Insert human insulin gene into bacteria
13Penicillin
- Directed evolution of penicillin strains
- Inserted genes to make erythromycin (penicillin
substitute) into E Coli, which totally worked
14Why do weGenetically Engineer Foods?
- Biotechnology is needed to feed the growing
population of the world, especially the Third
World. - Reduced chemical inputs, which will be good for
the environment. - Genetic Engineering creates better yields in
foods by giving them - Pest resistance
- Herbicide tolerance
- Disease resistance
- Cold/drought tolerance
- More nutrition
- Ability to replenish the soil they were grown in.
15Engineered food-process
- Biochemical scissors called restriction enzymes
are used to cut the strings of DNA in different
places and select the required genes. These genes
are usually then inserted into circular pieces of
DNA found in bacteria. The bacteria reproduce
rapidly and within a short time thousands of
identical copies can be made of the new gene. - There are now two principal methods that can be
used to force the new gene into the DNA of the
plant that is to be engineered. A ferry is made
with a piece of genetic material taken from a
virus or a bacterium. This is used to infect the
plant and in doing so smuggle the new gene into
the plants own DNA. Or, the genes are coated
onto large numbers of tiny gold pellets which are
fired with a special gun into a layer of cells
taken from the recipient organism, with any luck
finding a hit somewhere in the DNA in the nucleus
of the cells. - Genetically engineered animals and fish are
produced by microinjection. Fertilized eggs are
injected with new genes which will, in some
cases, enter the chromosomes and be incorporated
into the animals own DNA. Because the techniques
used to transfer genes have a low success rate,
the scientists need to be able to find out which
of the cells have taken up the new DNA. So,
before the gene is transferred, a marker gene
is attached which codes for resistance to an
antibiotic.
16Genetic Engineered Foods Fears
- "Human health effects can include higher risks of
toxicity, allergenicity, antibiotic resistance,
immune-suppression and cancer. As for
environmental impacts, the use of genetic
engineering in agriculture could lead to
uncontrolled biological pollution, threatening
numerous microbial, plant and animal species with
extinction, and the potential contamination of
non-genetically engineered life forms with novel
and possibly hazardous genetic material."
(http//www.centerforfoodsafety.org/geneticall7.cf
m) - Other possible problems
- Unintended harm to other organisms
- Reduced effectiveness of pesticides
- Gene transfer to non-target species
- Allergies
- Unknown effects
17Genetic Engineer Foods
Case Study
- Pusztai potato data
- Pusztai reportedly fed rats potatoes genetically
modified to have snowdrop lectin (which is an
insecticide). the rats had stunted growth
immune system damage - Controversy confusion over the lectin was from
snowdrop (cool) or jackbean (poisonous) - research republished in october 1999, reviewed by
6 reviewers. the paper did not mention stunted
growth or immunity issues, but reported that rats
fed on potatoes genetically modified with the
snowdrop lectin had "thickening in the mucosal
lining of their colon and their jejunum" when
compared with rats fed on non modified potatoes - While the implications of this study are
alarming, the study had a number of holes and its
results cannot be taken to reflect for Genetic
Engineering.
18Genetic Engineered Foods
Official Word on Safety
- GM foods are highly regulated and they must pass
extensive safety testing before reaching market. - GM foods have been consumed by hundreds of
millions of people so far with no reported health
problems to date. - Still it is possible that genetic engineering can
unintentionally transfer allergens between foods.
Also Genetic Engineering can create new
allergens. - Genetic Engineering has only been around for 15
years. There are worries that long-term problems
involving GM foods could be in our future.
19Medical uses of Genetic Engineering
- Pigs are often chosen as transgenic animals
because their physiology and organ size are so
similar to humans. The hope is that pig organs
can be used for organ transplantation, known as
xenotransplantation. - This will alleviating the shortage of human
hearts and kidneys, which are in scarce supply. - Researchers are also exploring the use of cell
transplantation therapy for patients with spinal
cord injury or Parkinsons disease. There are
several drawbacks to xenotransplantation. - Additionally, commercial companies seek to derive
therapeutic proteins, such as monoclonal
antibodies, from the milk of transgenic cows,
goats, rabbits, and mice and use them to
administer drugs in treatment of rheumatoid
arthritis, cancer, and other autoimmune
disorders.9
20Medical uses of Genetic Engineering 2
- Other uses of this transgenic combination include
growing tissue on a scaffolding, or supporting
framework. This then can be used as a temporary
skin substitute for healing wounds or burns or as
replacement cartilage, heart valves,
cerebrospinal shunts, or even collagen tubes to
guide re-growth of nerves that have been injured.
21Medical uses of Genetic Engineering 3
- Scientists harvest stem cells that can be used to
study human development and to treat disease.
Stem cells are important to biomedical
researchers because they can be used to generate
virtually any type of specialized cell in the
human body. The extraction process destroys the
embryo, which raises a variety of ethical
concerns. - Ex Stem cells since they are so versatile they
can be created into cardiac tissue, spinal tissue
and maybe even nerve tissue. Stem cells may be
the key to curing diseases caused by the erosions
of nerves such as Alzheimers and ALS.
22Ethical problems
- If the blending of nonhuman animal and human DNA
results, intentionally or not, in trans-species
entities possessing degrees of intelligence or
sentience never before seen in nonhuman animals,
should these entities be given rights and special
protections? - It is possible that in blending DNA of different
species we might be making our subjects
susceptible to new forms of disease. - Could we inadvertently create a super-disease?
- Is it right for parents to genetically alter
their children before birth?
23What is Synthetic Biology
- Foundational Ideas
- Automated DNA Construction
- Standards of Abstraction
- Goals
- Organization of genetic information
- Registry of Standard Parts
- Built up through iGEM
- Open-source biological programming language
- Scalable engineering framework
24Abstraction
25Banana Biobrick
Transcription terminator for the E.coli RNA
polymerase
Ribosome binding site
Promoter (lacI regulated)
T1 from E. coli rrnB
alcohol acetyltransferase I converts isoamyl
alcohol to isoamyl acetate (banana odor)
26Past projects
- Synthetic blood
- Banana E. coli
- Arsenic biosensor
- HIV Virotrap
- Self-organized pattern formation