Download File

Survey
yes no Was this document useful for you?
   Thank you for your participation!

* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project

Document related concepts
no text concepts found
Transcript
1. Which of the sheep above might a farmer use to breed sheep with good
meat and good wool?
2. Which of the sheep might a farmer use to produce sheep with good
wool that can survive in the Welsh mountains?
3. Think about the weather conditions where you live.
Write down a list of characteristics that a sheep should have if it
were to be farmed in your area.
4. What other characteristics would you like your sheep to have and why?
Cloning
What is cloning?
• Clones are organisms that are exact
genetic copies. Every single bit of their
DNA is identical.
• Clones can happen naturally—identical
twins are just one of many examples. Or
they can be made in the lab.
“Reproductive” cloning
What does this mean?
• Usually we get half our genetic information
from each of our parents:
• 50% + 50% = 100%
In cloning…
100% of genetic information comes from
one individual
Could
produce
Many people first heard of cloning when
Dolly the Sheep showed up on the scene in
1997. Artificial cloning technologies have
been around for much longer than Dolly,
though.
There are two ways to make an exact
genetic copy of an organism in a lab:
artificial embryo twinning and somatic cell
nuclear transfer.
1. Artificial Embryo Twinning
- mimics the natural process that creates
identical twins. (watch vid- natural twinning
http://learn.genetics.utah.edu/content/cloning/whatiscloning/)
Twins form very early in development when
the embryo splits in two (first days after egg
and sperm join) The embryo is made of just
a small number of unspecialized cells. Each
half of the embryo continues dividing on its
own, ultimately developing into separate,
complete individuals. Since they developed
from the same fertilized egg, the resulting
individuals are genetically identical.
1. Artificial Embryo Twinning
Artificial embryo twinning uses the same
approach, but it is carried out in a Petri dish
instead of inside the mother. A very early
embryo is separated into individual cells,
which are allowed to divide and develop for
a short time in the Petri dish. The embryos
are then placed into a surrogate mother,
where they finish developing. Again, since
all the embryos came from the same
fertilized egg, they are genetically identical.
1. Artificial Embryo Twinning
Artificial embryo twinning uses the same
approach, but it is carried out in a Petri dish
instead of inside the mother. A very early
embryo is separated into individual cells,
which are allowed to divide and develop for
a short time in the Petri dish. The embryos
are then placed into a surrogate mother,
where they finish developing. Again, since
all the embryos came from the same
fertilized egg, they are genetically identical.
2. Somatic Cell Nuclear Transfer
Somatic cell nuclear transfer (SCNT), also
called nuclear transfer, uses a different
approach than artificial embryo twinning, but
it produces the same result: an exact
genetic copy, or clone, of an individual. This
was the method used to create Dolly the
Sheep.
2. Somatic Cell Nuclear Transfer
Somatic cell nuclear transfer (SCNT), also
called nuclear transfer, uses a different
approach than artificial embryo twinning, but
it produces the same result: an exact
genetic copy, or clone, of an individual. This
was the method used to create Dolly the
Sheep.
2. Somatic Cell Nuclear Transfer
What does SCNT mean? Let's take it apart:
Somatic cell: A somatic cell is any cell in
the body other than sperm and egg, the two
types of reproductive cells. Reproductive
cells are also called germ cells. In
mammals, every somatic cell has two
complete sets of chromosomes, whereas
the germ cells have only one complete set.
2. Somatic Cell Nuclear Transfer
2. Somatic Cell Nuclear Transfer
Nuclear: The nucleus is a compartment that
holds the cell's DNA. The DNA is divided
into packages called chromosomes, and it
contains all the information needed to form
an organism. It's small differences in our
DNA that make each of us unique.
2. Somatic Cell Nuclear Transfer
Transfer: Moving an object from one place to
another. To make Dolly, researchers isolated a
somatic cell from an adult female sheep. Next they
removed the nucleus and all of its DNA from an
egg cell. Then they transferred the nucleus from
the somatic cell to the egg cell. After a couple of
chemical tweaks, the egg cell, with its new
nucleus, was behaving just like a freshly fertilized
egg. It developed into an embryo, which was
implanted into a surrogate mother and carried to
term. (The transfer step is most often done using
an electrical current to fuse the membranes of the
egg and the somatic cell.)
1
2
1
Body cell removed
from sheep to be
cloned
Nucleus removed
and kept2
Egg cell removed from donor
Electric
Shock
Nucleus removed and
discarded
Nucleus and empty
3
egg cell fuse
4
Cell division
Implant into
5
surrogate
mother
Cloned sheep
is born