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Chapter 13 – Genetic Engineering p. 60-62 Has Bonnie been bred by selective breeding? Selective Breeding • Choose organisms with the desired traits and breed them, so the next generation also has those traits • Nearly all domesticated animals and crops • Luther Burbank (1849-1926) developed >800 diff varieties of plants in his lifetime Hybridization • Breed two dissimilar organisms • In plants – often results in better lines – hybrids are larger, stronger, etc • In animals – hybrids produced may be weaker and sterile – Ex – wolf x dog ---- weak wolf-dog – Ex – horse x donkey ---- mule (sterile) Lion x Tiger = Liger Horse x Donkey = Mule Inbreeding • Breeding two organisms that are very similar to produce offspring with the desired traits. – Ex – dog breeds •Risks – might bring together two individuals that carry bad recessive genes – many purebred dogs have genetic disorders that mutts don’t get. Increasing Variation • Induce mutations – the ultimate source of genetic variations among a group of organisms – Mutagens used – radiation and chemicals – Some organisms are formed that have more desirable variations. Producing new kinds of bacteria • Can expose millions of bacteria at one time to radiation – increases chances of producing a successful mutant. – Ex – bacteria that can digest oil have been produced this way Producing new kinds of plants: • Drugs that prevent chromosomal separation in meiosis have been used to create plants that have more than two sets of chromosomes (2n). These are called polyploid plants. – Ex – bananas, citrus fruit, strawberries, many ornamental flowers Diploid corn Tetraploid corn Page 64-66 Manipulating DNA – tools of the molecular biologist • DNA extraction – open the cells and separate DNA from all the other cell parts. – Remember the onion lab? • Cutting DNA • Use restriction enzymes – each one cuts DNA at a specific sequence of nucleotides. • This will make different lengths of DNA • Separating DNA – Gel Electrophoresis – Place fragments at one end of a porous gel – we use agarose gel – Apply an electric current – The DNA is negatively charged and will travel toward the positive end of the gel. – The larger pieces of DNA move slower, the smaller ones faster. – Used to compare genomes of different organisms or different individuals. – Also used to locate and identify one particular gene out of an individual’s genome. Click here for animation about gel electrophoresis Using the DNA Sequence • Sequence can be read, studied, and changed. • Techniques used to study DNA sequences: – Use DNA polymerase and the 4 DNA bases to produce a new DNA strand complementary to unknown strand – some of the bases are dyed. • Dye-labeled strands are then separated using gel electrophoresis and the order of the bands tells the DNA sequence of the unknown strand. • Cutting and Pasting – make recombinant DNA (DNA from two different organisms). – Cut out the gene to be inserted, use same restriction enzyme to cut the receiving DNA strand, attach the two DNA strands Making Copies • Polymerase Chain Reaction (PCR) is used to make many copies of the same piece of DNA like a photocopy machine makes copies of papers. • This is useful if there is only a very small sample of DNA available (as that found in a small blood drop at a crime scene) Cell Transformation p. 64-66 • A cell takes in DNA from outside the cell and that DNA then becomes part of the cell’s DNA. • Bacteria – place DNA in the solution that bacteria live in, and some of that DNA will be taken in by the bacteria cells. Bacteria Transformation using Recombinant DNA • Cut a gene with a restriction enzyme out of a human cell (ex – gene for insulin or growth hormone work well) • Cut a bacterial plasmid using the same restriction enzyme (DNA ends will be complementary) • Insert Human gene into bacterial plasmid • Insert plasmid back into bacterial cell • Bacteria will multiply, and all offspring will have that gene – these bacteria will then follow the directions of the human gene and make the protein coded for (insulin or human growth hormone) Transforming Plant Cells • Use bacterial plasmid to insert desired gene into DNA of a plant Transforming Animal Cells – Directly inject DNA into the nucleus of an egg – it will become part of the chromosomes. • Has been used to replace specific genes. Glowing mouse cells in embryos that were made from sperm given the gene for bioluminescence from jellyfish – now all the cells glow! Applications of Genetic Engineering • Gene for luciferase was isolated from fireflies and inserted into tobacco plants – they glowed! • Transgenic organisms – contain genes from other species A transgenic mouse, which carries a jellyfish gene, glows green under fluorescent light. Transgenic Organisms • Bacteria - Make human proteins like insulin • Plants – 52% of soybeans, 25% of corn in US in year 2000. Some produce natural insecticide, some resist weed-killers, may soon be used to produce human antibodies; rice with vitamin A. •Animals – mice with immune systems like humans; farm animals that grow faster and larger with extra copies of growth hormone genes; animals with leaner meat; chickens resistant to bacterial infections. Cloning • Clone – member of a population of genetically identical cells produced from a single cell. • 1996 – Dolly cloned – 1st mammal (sheep) cloned. • She got arthritis several years earlier than most sheep • Died in 2003