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1 Unit 3- Genetics What is Genetics? _______________________________________________________________________________ What is heredity? _______________________________________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________________________________ What are Characteristics? _______________________________________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________________________________ Who is the founder of Genetics? _____________________________________________________________________________________ Modern genetics had its beginnings in an abbey garden in the 1850s where_________________ ______________________________________________documented a mechanism of inheritance. He discovered the basic principles of heredity by _______________________________________ ________________________________________experiments. His approach to science had been influenced at the ____________________________________by ____________________________one of his professors: the physicist Doppler. He was the first person to succeed in predicting how traits ________________________________ ___________________________________________________the next. Why did Mendel Succeed? In order to study inheritance, _______________________________________________________. His use of plants also allowed ______________________________________________________. He chose to study only characters that varied __________________________________________ _____________________________________________manner. (i.e.white or purple, tall or short) 2 He chose his subject carefully. Mendel chose the garden pea for his experiments for several reasons: -Garden peas ______________________________________________________________ _________________________called GAMETES -Male gametes form in the pollen produced in male reproductive organ -The female gametes form in the female reproductive organ - Perfect Flowers have _____________________________________________________. Imperfect flowers have one or the other . The male and female gametes _____________________________________________________ ____________________________________________________ The resulting _________________________________________ zygote and develops into a seed. The transfer of pollen grains from ___________________________________________________ 3 ________________________organ is called ____________________ What was his procedure? To hybridise 2 varieties of pea plants, Mendel _________________________________________. He transferred pollen from a true breeding white flower ______________________________ ____ ____________________________________ ____________flower. When he wanted to breed, or cross, one plant with another, Mendel opened the petals of a flower and removed the male organs ____________________________________________. He then dusted the ______________________________________________________________ _________________________________he wished to cross it with. The process Mendel used is called __________________________________________________. By using this technique, Mendel could be sure of the parents in his cross. Each seed was a _______________________________________________________. He studied _____________________________________________________________________, and he analyzed his data mathematically. (Remember the scientific method?) He used plants that breed true. This means if the plants __________________________________, t_____________________________they show characteristics that never vary from the parent. (white flower parents-white flower offspring) The tall pea plants he worked with were from populations of plants that had been tall for many ___________________________________________________________________________. Mendel’s Experiments The first parent ______________________________________________________________ 4 The offspring of the first mating _____________________________________ ______________________ _______________ (first filial which means son in Latin) Mendel let the F1 Generation to ______________________________________ _____________ _________________________ __________________________F2 generation Mendel tracked heritable characters ______________________________________________. When F1 hybrids were allowed to self-pollinate a _______________________________________ ________________________________occurred in the F2 generation. WHAT TOOL CAN WE USE TO MAKE PREDICTIONS? _________________________________________________________ Do you remember how to set one up? Two columns _______________________________________________ 5 Mendel’s Results In the P1, he ____________________________________________________________________ _______________________________with other plants that had __________________________. ___________________________________________ had purple flowers. There were not any plants with white flowers He let the F1 plants self-pollinate to produce the F2 Generation. The F1 had 705 purple flowers and 224 white flowers (ratio 3:1) Mendel ________________________________________________________________________ with the same results Punnett Squares Capital letters are used for the _____________________________________________. ___________________________________________________ are used for a recessive trait. The presence of a Dominant allele cancels out ________________________________________a _____________________________________________recessive allele For a recessive allele to show itself offspring must get __________________________________ _____________________________________ Two alleles______________________________________________ how a trait will be expressed One ___________________________________comes from each parent Homozygous for a trait- __________________________________________________ (BB or bb) Heterozygous for a trait- Both alleles are ___________________________________ (Bb or Ww) Mendel derived three main laws of Genetics It is amazing that he came up with the right conclusions in the 1850s _______________________ ________________________________________________________________________ or DNA DNA ____________________________________________________________ ________________________________________________Watson and Crick Each trait or characteristic exists in two versions. These two versions _________________________________________ (one allele for purple flowers and one for white flowers) 6 Chromosome Genes A, T and G, C DNA 1. Law of Dominance- one allele shows itself For each trait or characteristic, an individual inherits two alleles…..________________________ ______________________________________. True breeding plants had two identical alleles PP could also be called _____________________________________________ What would pp be called____________________________________________ Genotype-The two letters representing the two alleles (Pp, PP, Ww, Tt) for a trait. -The genotype for purple flowers would be _____________________________ -The genotype for white flowers would be? It is recessive, so the ONLY _________________________ -The genotype for brown hair could be_________________________________________ -The genotype for blond hair would be__________________________________________ Phenotype-The actual physical expression (what we see) of the two alleles for a trait -The phenotype of Pp would be _________________________________________ -The phenotype of PP would be ________________________________________ -The phenotype of pp would be__________________________________________ -The phenotype of BB for hair color would be _____________________________ -The phenotype of bb for hair color would be ______________________________ The allele __________________________________________________________________. In the F1 generation all flowers were purple (purple was dominant (Big P) and white was recessive (Little p) ) The allele that ___________________________________________________________________ _____________________________is present is called the recessive allele 7 2. Law of Segregation-one allele comes from each parent The two alleles for each trait separate when the ________________________________________. ____________________________________________(sperm, eggs or pollen) When an organism makes gametes the _______________________________________________ _____________________________________(results in one allele from each parent) How many chromosomes do humans have?____________________________________________ If humans have 46 chromosomes, how many chromosomes are in the sex cells (eggs and sperm)? The egg and sperm combine to make _________ chromosomes. So the egg has ______ and the sperm has _______________________________. What alleles could a heterozygous parent (Pp) could contribute ?_______________________________ What alleles could a homozygous parent (PP or pp) could contribute ? _______________________________________ _______________________________________ 3. Law of Independent Assortment More than one characteristic or ____________________ _______________________________________________ _____________________________________________ with each fertilization.(flower color, tall or short, eye color, curly v.s. straight hair etc.) The inheritance of one trait ___________________________ with the inheritance of another trait. Human eye color from your parent is a _____________________________________________ _____________________________________whether you get the allele for straight or curly hair. Mendel’s terminology True breeding: When the plants self-pollinate, all their offspring are of the same variety. 8 Hybridisation: _________________________________________________________________. Monohybrid cross: ______________________________________________________________. P generation: True _______________________________________________________. F1 generation: (first filial) _______________________________________________________. F2 generation: (second filial) Offspring from ___________________________________________ F1 hybrids. Mendel’s impact Mendel’s theories of inheritance, first discovered in garden peas, are equally valid _____________ _______________________________________________________________________________ Mendel’s impact endures, not only on genetics, but on all of science, as a case study __________ ______________________________________________________________________________. Scientists found that Mendel’s principles applied not only to peas but ___________________ ______________________________________________________. Much of the genetic research since Mendel’s work has been done with the common fruit fly (Dropsophilia melanogaster). Why is the fruit fly a good organism to study genetics? -new generation can be reproduced every ______________________________________ -two flies can produce 100 __________________________________________________ Why aren’t humans good organisms to study genetics? -new generation can be reproduced about ______________________________________. -_________________________________________________ (9 months) Genetics Vocabulary Allele- a version of a particular gene (one trait or characteristic) Phenotype- ____________________________________________________________________ in an individual (What you can see or easily test) 9 Genotype-the combination of ______________________________________________________ ( TT, Tt). Not easy to determine _____________________________________________________ ___________________________ traits. Can require test crosses or other test to determine the actual genotype. Gene-The segment of DNA that contains the genetic information for a given trait or characteristic. Located at specific points on the ____________________________________________________ __________________________________and contains two alleles Chromosome-a structure composed of DNA that contains the genetic material and ____________ __________________. Arranged in homologous pairs Incomplete Dominance-when the _______________________ ____________________ has a phenotype that is a mixture of the _____________________________ parent’s phenotype. Co- dominance -Occurs when alternative alleles are present in the genotype and fully ______________________ ________________________________________. -ABO blood grouping system, where a single gene locus features multiple allelesIA, IB, and i. Individuals carrying alleles for both ___________________________ express both in the blood phenotype ______________. -Roan Cattle- both Red and White alleles are expressed resulting in cattle _______________ _____________and roan. Multiple Alleles-many genes have more than two alleles. This means that more than two possibilities exist. 10 Antigens found in blood given in a transfusion that is foreign to the body produces antibodies which causes the blood to clump up and cause serious problems. Look at the right side of the chart on the previous page and see if you can answer the following questions. What blood type would be a universal donor? (could give a transfusion to any other blood type) A person with Type O________________________________________________ group (ie A, B, O or AB). Blood group O individuals do not have either A or B antigens on the surface of their RBCs, but their blood serum contains IgM ___________________ and anti-B antibodies against the A and B blood group antigens. What blood type would be a universal recipient? (could get a transfusion of any type of blood) Therefore, an individual ___________________________________________________ from any group (with AB being preferable), but can donate blood only to another type AB individual. Blood group AB individuals have both A and B antigens on the surface of their RBCs, and their blood serum does not contain any _______________ _______against either A or B antigen. Is there anything else that needs to be considered during blood transfusions? ______________________________ Rh Factor The __________________________________ was named after rhesus monkeys , since they were initially used in the research to make the antiserum for typing blood samples. The inheritance of this trait usually can be predicted using ____________________________ _______________________in which there are two alleles, D and d. Individuals who are homozygous dominant (DD) or heterozygous (Dd) are Rh+. Those who are ________________________________________________________________ (dd) are Rh- (i.e., they do not have the key Rh antigens). 11 Mother-fetus incompatibility The greatest problem with the Rh group is not so much incompatibilities following transfusions as those between _____________________________________________________ ______________________________________.. Mother-fetus incompatibility occurs when the mother is ____________ (dd) and the father is ___________ (DD or Dd). Maternal antibodies can cross the __________________________ and destroy fetal red blood cells. The risk increases with each pregnancy as the level of _________________________________ Rh type mother-fetus incompatibility occurs only when an Rh+ man fathers a child with an Rh- mother. Since an Rh+ father can have either a ___________________________________ genotype, there are 2 mating combinations possible: The fetus can be protected by giving Rh- women with Rh+ mates a serum (Rho-GAM ) containing anti-Rh+ antibodies. Polygenic Traits –involves the interaction of MORE than one gene. In humans this results in a wide range of phenotypes for skin color. -Qualitative variation usually indicates polygenic inheritance. -This occurs when there is an additive effect from __________________________genes. 12 -Pigmentation (____________________ ____________) in humans is controlled by at least three (3) separately inherited genes. There are some exceptions to Mendel’s law. Some alleles do blend (white and red snapdragons do produce pink flowers) 1. Eye color in humans (brown, blue, hazel, green etc A Closer Look at Chromosomes Humans have ________________________________________________ of Chromosomes Autosomes include the 22 pairs ____________________________________ sex chromosomes Karyotypes are prepared to look for ________________________________________________. We say each chromosome Pair is homologous (Both in pair looks similar in size and shape) Is this Karyotype for a male or Female? _______________ _____________Chromosome on #23 Autosome VS Sex Chromosomes Some Genetics Disorders are associated with ______________________ Other Genetic disorders are associated with the _____________________ __________________________________________ Sex linked disorders behave ________________________________. So it is useful to look at them separately. 13 Genetic Disorders Disorder Mutation Chromosome Angelman Syndrome DCP 22 Color Blindness P 23 (X) Cystic Fibrosis P 7 Down Syndrome C 21 (extra copy) Duchenne Muscular D. D 23 (X) Haemophilia P 23 (X) Klinefelter’s Syndrome C X (male XXY) Phenylketonuria P 12 Sickle Cell Disease P 11 Turner Syndrome C X (female XO) Syndrome- a number of _______________________________________ and characterizing a specific disease or condition Image of the karyotype of a child with Down syndrome or Trisomy 21: 14 In 1866 a physician named ___________________________________________________________ published an essay in England describing the symptoms. -Medical research has shown that age of mother is a factor Under age 30-_____________________ chance and Over age 40 _________________________ chance. Amniocentesis is a diagnostic procedure performed by inserting a needle through the abdominal wall into ___________ and withdrawing a small amount of _____________________________________________ surrounding the fetus. Amniocentesis can detect ___________________________________, ___________________such as Down syndrome, structural defects, such as spina bifida (open spine, where the vertebrae fail to close), anencephaly (a condition in which the brain is incomplete or missing. Ultrasound -The most well known application of ultrasound is its use in sonagraphy to produce pictures of fetuses in the human womb. Ethical Questions? Ethical motive: __________________________________________________________________ How do we use ___________________________ and ______________________________ as it develops further ? Terminate a fetus if…. -Has Down Syndrome? Is that morally _________________________________? _________________________When is a fetus a human? -Is a boy fetus and the parents want a girl? Short and want tall? You may have to make some ____________________________________________________ _______________________________during your life time. Autosomal Dominant Inheritance Dominant gene located on 1 of the ________________________ (all chromosomes except sex chromosomes) Usually rare, Individual __________________________________________________________ 15 Affected individuals have to carry only 1 dominant gene to be affected(heterozygous or homozygous) Passed onto males and females Every person affected must have at least 1 parent with the trait Does not skip generations E.g. Huntington’s disease, ______________________________________________ Do you know the symbols used to identify male and female? Draw Symbols Male Female Marfan syndrome is a heritable condition that affects the _________________________________ ________________________________together and provides a framework for growth and development. In Marfan syndrome, the _______________________________________________ and does not act as it should. Connective tissue is found throughout the body, Marfan syndrome can affect many body systems, including the ___________________________________________________________________, nervous system, skin, and lungs. (Some Scientist’s think President Lincoln may have had it …tall and lanky) Autosomal Dominant Pedigree Look for: Trait in every generation – Once leaves the pedigree does not return Every person with the trait must have a parent with the trait Males and females equally affected 16 *Individuals that are shaded black will have the disorder or the disease. Autosomal Recessive Inheritance The recessive gene is located on 1 of the 22 autosomes Letters used are lower case ie bb Unaffected parents (heterozygous) can produce affected offspring (if they get both recessive genes). We call the result ____________________________________________ Inherited by both males and females Can ____________________________________________(doesn’t show itself until two recessive alleles come together) If both parents have the trait then all offspring will also have the trait. The parents are both homozygous____________________________________________________________________. Eg. Albinism, thalassemia, __________________________________________and, cystic fibrosis. Albinism- is an inherited condition present at birth, characterized by a _________________ _______________________________________________________gives color to the skin, hair, and eyes. Thalassemia is a blood disorder passed down through families (inherited) in which the body makes an ____________________________________________________, the protein in red blood cells that carries oxygen. Sickle cell anemia is a disease passed down through families in which red blood cells Form an abnormal __________________________________ _________________. Sickle cells contain _________________________ that causes the cells to have a sickle shape. Sickle-shaped cells don’t move easily through your blood vessels. 17 Sex linked inheritance Dominant Genes are carried on the sex chromosomes (X or Y) Sex-linked notation – XBXB normal __________________ – XBXb carrier female – XbXb ________________________female – XBY normal male – XbY _____________________ male Male sperm determines the sex of the individual at fertilization -Sperm contains a Y- __________________________ -Sperm contains a X- __________________________ Dominant gene on X chromosome Affected males pass to all daughters and none of their sons – Genotype= XAY If the mother has an ____________________________________________________________ and is homozygous (XAXA) all children will be affected If Mother heterozygous (XAXa) 50% chance of each child being affected E.g. dwarfism, rickets, brown teeth enamel. 18 Sex linked Inheritance Recessive Gene located on the _____________________________________ More males than females affected Y does not contain a second allele so Males have the trait if they get ________________________________________________ mother. Females can only inherit if the father is affected and mother is a carrier (hetero) or affected (homo) Males cannot be carriers (only have 1 X so either affected or not) Can ______________________________________________ E.g. color blindness, hemophilia, Duchene muscular dystrophy More males being affected Affected female will pass onto all her sons Affected male will pass to daughters who will be a carrier (unless mother also affected) Unaffected father and carrier mother can produce ___________________________________ Sex linked recessive problem 8-10% of males and 1/200 females (0.5%) are born with _______________________________ _______________deficiency. XcY or XcXc results in _____________________________________________________ Females with XcX are carriers and have normal vision 19 Can a color blind father have normal sons?________________________________________ ___________________________________________________________________________ Xc Y X X Can a carrier mother have normal sons??________________________________________ _________________________________________________________________________ X Y Xc X Environmental Impact on Phenotype No. Increasing the pH of the soil will change the color of hydrangea flowers from ___________________________________________ The _________________________________________________________________ organism can be influenced by the environment ____________________________________________________________________________ are among the external environmental factors that can determine which genes are turned on and off The ______________________________________________ the way an organism develops and functions. Which color variation in hares is useful in winter? _____________ The pigment Chlorophyll makes grass green. What happens to grasses color in winter? 20 Identical Twin and Environmental influences When you study psychology in college you will study “Nature VS Nuture” What is more important in making us who we are today? Is it how we are brought up? Is our genetic make-up more important? Why do these identical twins separated at birth look so different? _____________________________________________________________ Mitosis and Meiosis • Mitosis: -division of ___________________________________ (body) cells - Exact copy of cell (____________________ or Diploid) -Takes place in ___________________________________________________ (growth, repair, replacement) • Meiosis -division of ___________________________________ (sex cells) -Not exact copy of cell (N or Haploid) - Meiosis only takes place in organisms _______________________________________ Mitosis • Interphase -Interesting things happen! -Cell preparing to divide -Genetic ____________________________________________ • Prophase -Chromosome _________________________________________ -Chromosomes thicken and shorten -become visible -2 chromatids joined by a _________________________________________ -Centrioles move to the opposite sides of the nucleus -Nucleolus disappears -Nuclear membrane disintegrate • Metaphase -Chromosomes meet in the middle! -Chromosomes arrange at equator of cell -Become attached to spindle fibres __________________ ___________________________by centromeres ___________________ chromosomes do not associate 21 • Anaphase -Chromosomes get pulled apart -Spindle fibres contract pulling chromatids to the opposite poles of the cell • Telophase -Now there are two! -Chromosomes __________________________ -Spindle fibres disintegrate -Centrioles replicate -Nucleur membrane forms -Cell ___________________________ Meiosis • Only takes place in the gonads or ____________________________ • 4 ___________________________________ produced • Each daughter cell has ________________________________________________________ • 2 sets of _____________________________________________- involved 22 Does Meiosis take place in organisms that only reproduce sexually ? _______________________________________________________________________________ What are the ONLY cells in a human body that are not produced by Mitosis with a T? ________________________________________________________________________________. Sexual Reproduction • Takes ___________________________ to reproduce • Each Parent contributes one ______________________________________________________ • Sexual reproduction results in much ________________________________________________ _____________________in Offspring • This genetic variation ____________________________________________ a population can survive when the environment changes 1. Increased Variation through Independent Assortment during Meiosis 23 2. Increased Variation through Crossing Over during Meiosis • You would think one Gamete would contain either one _________________ _________________ or one paternal __________________________________ ____________________, but not both. • Crossing Over produces _____________________________________ __________ during meiosis which combines genes inherited from both of our parents on one chromosome. 3. Increased Variation through The Random Nature of Fertilization • An Ovum (egg) represents approximately ____________________________________ chromosome combinations • A Sperm cells represents approximately 8 million possible chromosome combinations • Think about that for a few seconds • All of those possible combinations is what makes us unique and makes us different from our _________________________and _____________________________s. • It is this variation in organisms that is the _____________________________________________. Asexual Reproduction • Organisms that reproduce Asexually (takes only one parent) produce an exact copy of themselves • An exact copy can be called a clone • This greatly reduces the variation that is in a population. One disease or a change in the environment can wipe them all out. • Has potential advantages in stable advantageous environment Asexual Reproduction-Budding Fission is an _________________________ Budding is an unequal division 24 • Fragmentation and Regeneration • Vegetative propagation-is development of a new plant from a ____________________________ _______________________________________________________________________________ . Strawberry runners Quack Grass Protein synthesis • Protein synthesis is ____________________________________________________________, using the information that is found in DNA (Chromosomes). Proteins • Proteins are very important _______________________________________________________. • Proteins are used to build cell structures and are used as __________________________. (remember that enzymes speed up chemical reactions..used in things such as digestion) • Proteins are long chains of small molecules called _____________________________________. • Different proteins are made using _______________________________________ of amino acids. • The pieces of information in DNA are called ___________________________________. • Genes _______________________________________________________________________ by putting the correct amino acids into a long chain in the correct order. DNA inside the nucleus • • Protein synthesis begins with the stored genetic information of a __________________________. The DNA of this gene will ‘unzip’ like _____________________________________________ Only _________side of the DNA is used now A single strand of the RNA forms one subunit unit at a time and _______________________(copies) _____________________________________________________________________________________ RNA (Single strand instead of double strand) • The new strand is an RNA molecule. Note that there is one difference in the subunits: RNA contains yellow ________________________________________________ purple Thymine 25 • The RNA now has copied the ___________________________________________ of the gene. • The DNA is no longer needed in the process of protein synthesis • The DNA zips closed and _________________________________________________ Messenger RNA (MRNA) • This RNA molecule is called ___________________________ RNA (now carrying the genetic ‘ message’). • It will leave the nucleus and travel to a ________________________ to build a protein molecule. • Once the messenger RNA [mRNA] is at ___________________________________, the genetic information will be translated by ribosome to make a protein At the ribosome • The genetic information is interpreted and used to assemble a ____________________________. • We should remember, the mRNA is a sequence of subunits (like a chain) that tells how to build a protein • A protein is a _______________________________________________ – a chain of amino acids. • • The mRNA contains information in sets of ________________________________. Each set of three is the code for a particular amino acid. (Called a codon) Transfer RNA (tRNA) A molecule of ________________________RNA (tRNA) will carry in the proper amino acid, one at a time. polypeptide The chain of amino acids is called a ‘polypeptide’and when it is very long it is _______________ _____________________________________ Even this is a very, very short polypeptide chain. Most have _____________________________ ___________________________________________of amino acids. • The end of protein __________________________________________________. The building blocks of proteins • • Like carbohydrate and lipid molecules proteins contain the elements : Oxygen(O), Carbon(C),and __________________________________(H) In addition they always contain the element _____________________________(N). Draw the structure of an Amino Acid 26 How are proteins constructed • First the Amino acids bond together. • They are joined together by what is known as a ___________________________________. Protein construction • When two amino acids join together they form a _______________________________________. • When many amino acids are joined together a long-chain polypeptide is formed. • Organisms join amino acids in different linear sequences to form a variety of polypeptides in to complex molecules, __________________________________. How useful are proteins? • Cell membrane proteins: _________________________________________________________ ____________________________for processes such as facilitated diffusion and active transport. • Enzymes: Catalyse biochemical reactions, e.g. ______________________________________ in to polypeptides • Hormones: _________________________________________________________ and trigger reactions in other parts of the body e.g. insulin regulates blood sugar. • Immuno-proteins: e.g. __________________________________________________________ and act against antigenic sites on microbes. • Structural proteins: give strength to organs, e.g. ___________________ makes tendons tough • Transport proteins: e.g. haemoglobin transports oxygen in the blood. • Contractile proteins: e.g. actin and myosin help muscles shorten during contraction • Storage proteins: e.g. aleurone in seeds helps germination, and casein in milk helps supply valuable protein to babies. • Buffer proteins: e.g. blood proteins, due to their high charge, help maintain the pH of plasma. Enzymes • Living cells carry out many biochemical reactions. • These reactions take place rapidly due to enzymes. • All enzymes consist of globular proteins. The lock and key theory • Substrate Enzyme Induced fit theory • The active site is a cavity of a particular shape. • Initially the active site is not the correct shape in which to fit the substrate. 27 • As the substrate approaches the active site, the site changes and this results in it being a perfect fit. • • After the reaction has taken place, and the products have gone, the active site returns to its normal shape. Reaction without enzyme Lowering of activation energy substrate • • Reaction with enzyme Every reaction requires the _________________________ _________________________ Enzymes _________________ ________________of activation energy needed as seen in the graph. products Progress of reaction Interesting Fact about Cats• The gene for color of fur _______________________________________________________. • Male cats have one X chromosome and ______________________________________________. • Female cats on the other hand have two X chromosomes and can __________________________ ______________________________________________________________________________ 28 Name:____________________________________ (Notes will be collected later this week for a grade) Biotechnology, Cloning and Genetic Engineering Selective Breeding Humans use selective breeding to pass _________________________ on to the next generation. Selective breeding is AKA ________________________ (humans decide who will breed instead of nature) Hybrids (Heterozygous for a trait) can be used to increase hardiness of plants. ___________________________ keeps desired traits within a line of organisms by breeding _________________ organisms. To increase variation, breeders often introduce _____________________ (the ultimate source for genetic variation) into the population. Breeders discovered a pumpkin mutation that produced white Spots. With careful inbreeding they eventually able to produce a white pumpkin. Biotechnology The terms"biotechnology" and "genetic _______________________" commonly are used interchangeably Biotechnology (sometimes shortened to "biotech") is a field of applied Biology Biotechnology involves the use of ___________________________________ and bioprocesses in engineering, technology, __________________ and other fields requiring bioproducts. _________________________- is imitating living organisms to solve human problems. My favorite example is ________________that we have all become so dependent on. Biotechnology-Cloning A clone is a member of a population of genetically __________________ cells produced from a single cell. Dolly-the ______________________________ Cows , Cats and more. Can we bring back ___________________________ or even __________________ species? 29 Reproductive cloning Reproductive cloning generally uses "__________________ cell nuclear transfer" (SCNT) to create animals that are genetically identical. This process entails the transfer of a __________________ from a _________________________ adult cell (somatic cell) to an egg that has no nucleus. If the egg begins to divide normally it is transferred into the ____________________ of the surrogate mother. Dolly, the sheep Dolly, the sheep was the ______________________________________ to have been successfully cloned from an adult cell. Dolly was formed by taking a cell from the ____________________of her biological mother. Her embryo was created by taking the cell and inserting it into a sheep ____________________. The _______________________________ was then placed inside a female sheep that went through a normal pregnancy. Somatic or body cells __________ ______________ Egg or Ovum has ____________________ Fused cell has 54 chromosomes…….tricking the __________________________________________________________ by a sperm 111 tttttttttttt ttttttt 30 She was cloned at the Roslin Institute in Scotland and lived there from her birth in ________ until her death in ________________ when she was six. This photo is of Dolly and her __________________________ called Bonnie Telomeres get ______________________ as an organism ages BioTechnology- Genetic engineering Genetic engineering- the direct ___________________________________________ of an organism's genome using modern DNA technology. It involves the introduction of _____________ or synthetic genes into the organism of interest. Using their knowledge of DNA and various techniques, scientists can extract, cut, identify and copy DNA. DNA _______________________ – simple chemical procedure to separate DNA. DNA Cutting – _____________________________________ cut particular DNA sequences. Separating DNA – ________________________________________. Copy – using _________________________________ chain reaction “PCR” Recombinant DNA technology ______________________________________________ DNA technology- Combining genes from different organisms The resulting organism is said to be "genetically modified," "genetically engineered," or "transgenic." The first organisms ________________________________________ were bacteria in 1973 and then mice in 1974. Insulin -producing bacteria were commercialized in __________ Formation of recombinant DNA requires a ___________________, a DNA molecule that will replicate within a living cell. Vectors are generally derived from plasmids or ____________ 31 ________________ organisms contain genes from other organisms. -Making onions glow using __________________ DNA. -Using ____________________ to make human insulin. -Using genetic modification to improve food supply known as ______________________. One of the best-known and controversial applications of genetic engineering is the creation of ___________________________________________________ foods. Genetically modified food has been sold since _________________________ A major safety concern relates to the human health implications of eating genetically modified food, in particular whether __________________________or allergic reactions could occur.[70] Ethical concerns involve religious issues, corporate control of the food supply, ______________________________________________________________and the level of labeling needed on genetically modified products. Gene Therapy In gene therapy, an absent or ____________________________________ is replaced by a normal, working gene. During your life time gene therapy has the potential to almost “cure “ some _______________ ______________________________________. Gene Therapy-One Example In May 2008, _________________________________ reported positive results using gene therapy to treat Leber's Congenital Amaurosis (LCA). LCA is a rare inherited eye disorder that causes ___________________________ in children. The patients had a defect in the RPE65 gene, which was replaced with a functional copy using a virus as a vector. Think of the virus as ___________________________ the cell with the _______________gene. In _________________________________________________, patients recovered functional vision without apparent side-effects. That’s pretty impressive, _______________________________ vision to a blind person Also worthy of note. The therapy was repeated in ______________________________________ ________________________________! The _______________________________________________ in action