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Gene Transformation and Biotechnology December 8,2007 OCTC Biotechnology “Biotechnology uses living organisms or substances from those organisms to produce products, to modify existing products, to develop microorganisms with specific uses, or to improve plants or animals”: former Office of Technology Assessment of U.S. Congress (dismantled in 1995) Genes • What are they? • Where are they? • What do we do with them? – We combine them with each other – We manipulate them for our purposes – We use them in Biotechnology – We transfer them among unrelated organisms to express them Genes and DNA DNA molecule Gene 1 Gene 2 Gene 3 DNA strand A A A C C G G C A A A A U U U G G C C G U U U U Transcription RNA Codon Translation Polypeptide Amino acid Transferring Genes • Vectors are used to move genes around • Plasmids, Bacteriophage, Cosmids, YACs, BACs, Viruses are used • E. coli often used to express genes that have been transferred • Transformation is a common method for gene transfer Bacteria • Lack a nucleus: prokaryotes • E. coli and other organisms • Often used as expression systems • Easy to manipulate • Easy to maintain • Inexpensive to grow • Short generation time • Small biomass generated Prokaryote Cell Prokaryotic flagella Ribosomes Capsule Cell wall Plasma membrane Nucleoid region (DNA) Pili Transformation • Recipient cells take up foreign DNA from surrounding media • Often accomplished using plasmid vectors • Artificially induced in laboratories • Allows introduction of unrelated genes into bacterial expression systems • Products of interest can be produced, extracted, and purified for use Bacterial Plasmids • Circular pieces of DNA that can be replicated outside the bacterial chromosome • Occur in varying sizes • Capable of carrying varying sizes and types of genes • May produce several hundred copies in a single cell Vector Creation • Restriction enzymes are used to cut DNA to be inserted into small fragments • Plasmids are cut open with REs so DNA fragments may be inserted • Plasmids, DNA fragments, and DNA ligase are mixed to put it all back together: cloning • Ready for transformation now Restriction enzyme recognition sequence G A AT T C C T TAAG DNA Restriction enzyme cuts the DNA into fragments G C G Sticky end Addition of a DNA fragment from another source C G Two (or more) fragments stick together by base-pairing G A ATT C C T T AA G G A AT T C C T T AA G DNA ligase pastes the strand Recombinant DNA molecule G C Vector Creation Transformation • Transformation was discovered in 1928 by Frederick Griffith using S. pneumoniae in mice: “Transforming Principle” • In 1944 a genetic basis was for process was discovered by Avery, McLeod, and McCarty – They named the process “Transformation” Transformation of E. coli • Cells capable of taking up foreign DNA are competent – Some cells are naturally competent, some cells have to be made competent – E. coli not naturally competent • Artificial competence induced using cold and cationic solutions (cold CaCl2) • Plasmid introduced into iced solution • Cells heat shocked to force plasmid uptake • Solution allowed to return to ambient temperature, pores close Transformation Human cell E. coli Isolate DNA from two sources Cut both DNAs with the same restriction enzyme Plasmid DNA Gene V Sticky ends Mix the DNAs; they join by base-pairing Add DNA ligase to bond the DNA covalently Recombinant DNA plasmid Gene V Put plasmid into bacterium by transformation Recombinant bacterium Clone the bacterium Bacterial clone carrying many copies of the human gene Detecting Transformation • Many plasmids carry antibiotic resistance genes: R factors • Used to select transformants • pBestLuc plasmid contains ampr and luc genes • Ampicillin resistance, Luciferase production • Potential transformants plated on ampicillin-containing media • Colonies exposed to luciferin solution and observed for luminescence Manipulating Genes for Biotechnology • • • • To make products To improve crops To improve livestock To improve quality of life • To treat disease Biotechnology Applications • Recombinant pharmaceutical products • Transgenic animals as pharmaceutical “factories” and organ sources • Transgenic crops Bacterium Cell containing gene of interest Plasmid isolated DNA isolated Gene inserted into plasmid Bacterial Plasmid chromosome Recombinant DNA (plasmid) DNA Gene of interest Plasmid put into bacterial cell Recombinant bacterium Cell multiplies with gene of interest Copies of protein Copies of gene Clone of cells Gene for pest resistance inserted into plants Gene used to alter bacteria for cleaning up toxic waste Protein used to make snow form at higher temperature Protein used to dissolve blood clots in heart attack therapy Manipulating Genes for Biotechnology • Why manipulate genes? • How are humans affected by gene manipulation? • What are the benefits? • What are the risks? • Who should be allowed to manipulate genes? • Ethical considerations? • Legal considerations? Sources • Barnum, Susan. Biotechnology An Introduction, Second Edition. Thomson Publishing, CA. 2005. • Clark, David P., Lonnie D. Russell. Molecular Biology Made Simple and Fun, Third Edition. Cache River Press, IL. 2005. • • This product was funded by a grant awarded under the President’s Community-Based Job Training Grants as implemented by the U.S. Department of Labor’s Employment and Training Administration. The information contained in this product was created by a grantee organization and does not necessarily reflect the official position of the U.S. Department of labor. All references to non-governmental companies or organizations, their services, products, or resources are offered for informational purposes and should not be construed as an endorsement by the Department of Labor. This product is copyrighted by the institution that created it and in intended for individual organizational, non-commercial use only.