Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

The Good, the bad and the ugly of Genetic Engineering

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "The Good, the bad and the ugly of Genetic Engineering"— Presentation transcript:

1 The Good, the bad and the ugly of Genetic Engineering

2 Genetic engineering Scientists change the DNA code of an organism in order to: Make transgenic organisms Clone an organism

3 Transgenic Organisms Organisms which have a gene from another organism in their DNA

4 Practical applications
Plants with “insecticide” genes

5 Practical applications
Cows with extra copies of growth hormones

6 Practical applications
Bacteria that make human insulin protein for diabetics

7 Practical applications?
Cool Glow-in-the-dark Mice!!

8 How? Jelly Fish have a protein called GFP (Green fluorescent protein)
Gives them that “glow”

9 How? So… They must have a gene (DNA) that has the info to make GFP
GFP Protein = glowing jelly fish mRNA transcribed from GFP Gene GFP Gene (DNA) Transcription Translation

10 How? What makes us different is What genes we have not how we make the proteins!!! So all you need to do is give an organism a new gene and it will be able to make the protein!

11 How? Jelly fish nucleus with GFP gene Remove GFP gene
Mouse nucleus without GFP gene Add GFP gene Mouse nucleus with GFP gene GFP protein made Glowing Mice

12 Insulin made by bacteria
Diabetes: dysfunctional Insulin gene; no or low amounts of insulin protein made Means we can’t regulate blood sugar levels we can force bacteria to make insulin for us

13 Insulin made by bacteria
Same process: Tell me how!

14 Find healthy insulin gene in human
Cut it out and insert it in bacteria Bacteria then MAKE human insulin even though they have no use for it! We extract the insulin from bacteria and use it in injections

15 Cloning Creating an organism that is genetically identical to its only parent.

16 Cloning Mammals usually mix info from two parents In cloning all the chromosomes of the baby come from 1 parent.

17 Sheep 1 Take 1 body cell (udder) Extract Nucleus Sheep 2 Take 1 egg cell Remove nucleus

18 Inject nucleus into Egg Zap to stimulate cell division
Implant egg into surrogate sheep (sheep 3)

19 Wait for Dolly to be born
Which sheep is Dolly identical to?? Why? Which sheep have to be female?

20 Snuppy: cloned Afghan Hound

21

22 Genetic Testing Checking a fetus to determine if the baby has any disease. - Cystic fibrosis - Tay Sach’s Disease - Down Syndrome

23 Genetic Testing Done BEFORE birth Can detect two kinds of mutations
Chromosomal: easily visible, major mutations Gene mutations: checking for mutated gene; must know what you are looking for!

24 Amniocentesis

25 Amniocentesis Extracting amniotic fluid from womb
Contains cells from fetus DNA or protein can be isolated and examined

26 Can check for: Mutations in certain genes (must be looking for something specific) Chromosome abnormalities Abnormal protein levels

27 DNA finger printing Used to compare two people’s DNA
Used in paternity cases Used for crime scene analysis

28 DNA finger printing

29 DNA finger printing Based on the idea that EVERYONE’s DNA is unique, like a fingerprint BUT related individuals will have more similarities

30 How to do a DNA fingerprint
Get a sample of DNA and digest it with restriction enzymes restriction enzymes cut DNA at specific sequences. For example: EcoRI cuts DNA every time it sees the sequence GAATTC

31 How to do a DNA fingerprint
If everyone’s DNA is unique, the enzyme will cut each persons DNA differently Example: TCATGAATTCATTGCCGAATTCCGTGAATCCAGAATTCGGACTA TCATGAAGTCATTGCCGAATTCCGTGAATCCAGACTTCGGACTA

32 How to do a DNA fingerprint
Run cut up DNA on through electrophoresis Click here for animation

33 How to do a DNA fingerprint
Small pieces travel fast and move further down the gel slab. Large pieces move slower and stay closer to the injection point.


Download ppt "The Good, the bad and the ugly of Genetic Engineering"

Similar presentations


Ads by Google