1) Small piece of tissue is taken from plant to be cloned, usually from shoot tip, called an explant.
2) Cells divide but do not differentiate, forming a mass of undifferentiated cells called a Callus.
3) Single callus cells removed and moved to a nutrient medium (rich in minerals such as nitrates, etc.)
4) Clones moved to a greenhouse, then outdoors.
Example: English Elm - produces new growth in the form of basal sprouts, which grow from meristem tissue in the trunk close to the ground,
The production of new structures in an organism that can grow into new individual structures.
Artificial Cloning
Splitting embryos
1) In vitro fertilisation. Grow in vitro to 16 cellembryo.
2) Split embryo into several segments.
3) Implant into surrogate mother.
4) All offspring are genetically identical (clones) but not so to their parents.
Nuclear transfer, using enucleated eggs
1) Remove mammary cells from udder and ovum and enucleate ovum.
2) Transplant nucleus from mammary cell into ovum and stimulate with electro-fusion.
3) Insert into surrogate mother. Offspring will be identical to sheep from whom the mammary cell (and therefore nucleus) was taken.
Defintion: Totipotent Stem Cells - e.g. embryonic cells, capable to differentiating into any type of adult cell found in the organism.
Defintion: Biotechnology - The industrial use of organisms/parts of them to produce food, drugs, and other products.
Microorganisms in Biotechnology
Advantages
Grow rapidly in favourable conditions
Can be genetically engineered to produce specific products.
Grow well at relatively low temps.
Tend to produce products more pure than chemical processes.
Can be grown on nutrients otherwise toxic or useless to humans.
Batch Fermentation
Stirrer: Exposes reactants to fresh O2 by homogenising the mixture.
Water Jacket: Maintains a steady, desired temperature to stop enzymes from denaturing.
Acid/Alkali tube: Maintains pH to prevent denaturing.
Continous Fermentation: Substrates are constantly added, product constantly removed.
Example: Fusarium - fungi that produces Quorn mycoprotein
Metabolites: products of metabolic reactions.
Primary: normal product produced all the time, e.g. CO2, lactic acid, urea.
Secondary: Not normally produced. Produced during stress.
Example: Penicillin - Produced by Penicillium notatum to kill bacteria who are competing for a limited resource. In production, penicillium is allowed to reproduce to a large mass and then substrate is removed.
Definition: Aspepsis - absence of unwanted microorganisms
Aseptic technique: Any technique/measure taken to ensure unwanted microorganisms do not contaminate culture/products.
Immobilised enzymes
Definition: Immobilising - A method by which to separate the product from the enzyme because enemy could be viewed as a contaminant, and this allows it to be reused.
Adsorption: Weak attachment to an immobilising support, e.g. clay due to ionic and hydrophobic interactions. Active site is not changed due to bonding. Can be very effective unless leakage occurs.
Covalent Bonding: Stronger covalent bonding to a support (e.g. clay particles). Active site not affected and a limited quantity can be held. Leakage is rare.
Entrapment: Enzyme trapped in a gel bead. Active sites unaffected by less easily accessible due to trapping barrier, thus reaction rates can be lowered.No leakage. Insulates the enzyme from denaturing due to high temps or pH changes.
Membrane Seperation: Enzyme and substrate separated by a partially permeable membrane, across which the enzyme cannot move, but the substrate can. The substrate diffuses over and is catalysed to form the product, and thus diffuses back. Product is washed away with distilled water so all of product will diffuse back.
Advantages
(enzyme) can be re-used so reduces cost
product, pure(r) / uncontaminated
reduced downstream processing costs
reaction, can be faster / have higher yield , because can be done at higher temperature
(immobilised enzyme) works at high(er) temperature
(immobilised enzyme) works in changed pH
The Genome
Definiton: Genomics - The study of the whole set of genetic information in the form of DNA sequences that occur in the cells of organisms in a particular species.
How DNA is prepared for sequencing.
1) Homogenise tissue sample to increase surface area.
2) Add detergents to break down cell membranes.
3) Add protease to remove histone proteins and leave 'naked' DNA.
4) DNA is isolated from mix by precipitation with ethanol.
5) DNA stands re-suspended in aq. pH buffered medium.
6) DNA cut up by restriction enzymes. Different enymes cut at different base sequences called restriction sites, of which there are 2 main types: Blunt ends, and sticky ends, which are the ones used in genetic engineering.
Restriction enzymes: Also called restriction endonucleases. They are produced by bacteria to break up virus DNA that is injected into them.
PCR: Polymerase Chain Reaction
Used to make multiple copies of a (shorter) section of DNA. It is artificial DNA replication and is used to amplify DNA samples.
Reaction mixture contains
Sample of DNA to be amplified
Excess of primers (more chance of bonding to unzipped DNA strand)
DNA Polymerase
The 4 deoxyribose nucleotides
Definition: Primers - short, single stranded sequences of DNA, around 10-20 bases, which bind to a section of DNA, as DNA polymerase cannot bind directly to single stranded DNA fragments.
Process
1) Heated to 95 degrees, breaking the H bonds and separating the DNA strands.
2) Cooled to 55 degrees - primers added and they bond to complimentary site on DNA (placed upstream and downstream of target DNA section)
3) Heated to 72 degrees, the optimum temperature for Taq Polymerase to build complimentary strands of DNA, binding to the primers and starting from there, working along to the end of the DNA strand, This is repeated in cycles.
Taq Polymerase: From bacteria that naturally exist in hot springs, therefore their enzymes have many disulphide bridges, preventing them from denaturing at high temperatures (known as thermophilic)
Sequencing using modified PCR: (Interrupted PCR and Electrophoresis)
Interrupted PCR
1) Some of the free deoxyribonucleotides have fluorescent dyes attached (one colour specific to each type).
2) These nucleotides are modified and if they are added to the growing chain, the DNA polymerase is thrown off and the strand ends,
3) As the reaction proceeds, the fragments produced vary in size. These strands are then run through a machiene where a laser reads the colour sequence from smallest to largest strand, allowing the sequence of colours (and therefore the bases) to be displayed.
Electrophoresis
Using electricity to separate differently sized fragments of DNA.The samples of DNA are placed on an agarose gel at the negative anode end. Phosphate groups have a charge of three minus, therefore the DNa fragments will move to the positive cathode. Smaller fragments are more mobile and therefore move faster. Researches add a tracking dye, giving blue DNA.
Southern Blotting
To make a replica of DNA fragments of interest to do further tests on without destroying the original.
An absorbant surface (e.g. Nylon) is put on the agarose gel after electrophoresis to draw up a small amount of the fragments.
DNA Probes
Single-stranded, short segments of DNA with a known sequence. Bind to complementary sections.
The DNA on an absorbent surface is put into a basic solution to unzip it and make it single stranded by disrupting the H bonds between bases. DNA probes then used to identify target sequences of DNA/Gene.
This can be used to diagnose diseases by comparing healthy and unhealthy DNA samples (Microarray).
Bacterial Artificial Chromosome (BACs)
Used to make 'clone libraries' - multiple copies of (lager) sections of DNA.
A fertility plasmid from bacterium, which has been genetically modified with DNA from another organism. It will then make multiple copies by replicating.
Definition: Recombiant Gene Technology -
Processes involving combining DNA from
different organisms/sources in a single
organism.
Obtaining the gene to be
engineered.
1) mRNA produced from transcription of
the gene can be obtained from cells
where that gene is expressed, e.g. insulin
from the B cells of the islet of
Langerhans.
2) Gene can be synthesised using an
automated polynucleotide
sequencer.
Placing gene in a vector.
The gene can be sealed into a
bacterial plasmid using the
enzyme DNA ligase. It can also
be sealed into virus genomes
or yeast cell chromosomes.
Getting the gene into the recipient cell
Once packaged in a
vector it is often part
of a large molecule
that doesn't easily
cross the membrane
to enter the recipient
cell.
Resulting DNA
is called
Recombiant
DNA
Methods
Electroportation: high voltage pulse applied to
disrupt the membrane.
Microinjection: DNA is injected using
a very fine micropipette into the host
cell nucleus
Viral Transfer: Uses virus's mechanism
for infecting cells by injecting DNA
directly.
Liposomes: DNA is injected in lipid molecules - fat soluble
so they can diffuse across lipid membrane.
Genetic engineering and bacteria
Any organism that
contains DNA added to
its cells as the result of
genetic engineering is
described as transgenic.
Definiton: Bacterial
Conjugation - a
process where
genetic material may
be exchanged (N.B.
only plasmids).
If large quantities of
recombinant plasmids are added
to a mix of bacteria, some will
take them up. The addition of
calcium salts and heat shock
increases the rate at which they
are taken up. However it is very
inefficient; less than 0.25% take
up the plasmid.
Heat shock: Temperature is lowered
to freezing, then quickly raised to
forty degrees.
Bacteria are
known as
transformed
bacteria after
taking up
recombinant
plasmid.
Example: Insulin
1) Insulin: a polypeptide containing
51 amino acids. Scientists used
specialised centrifugation to obtain
the mRNA for it.
2) Used reverse transcriptase to
synthesise a complimentary
DNA strand. Adding DNA
polymerase and nucleotides to
this produced a second strand,
thus giving us a copy of the
original gene, called a cDNA
gene.
3) Plasmids cut upon
with restriction
enzyme. Some take
up the gene, DNA
ligase seals the
plasmid, giving us a
recombinant plasmid.
Bacteria is then put
onto an agar plate.
4) Plasmids
with the insulin
gene are
identified using
radio-labelled
antibodies that
bind specifically
to insulin.
N.B. Modern
methods work
differently, using
genetic markers.
1) Original plasmids are chosen
because they contain genes that
make them resistant to two
different antibiotic chemicals.
These genes are genetic markers.
2) Plasmids are cut by restriction
enzyme that has its restriction site
on one of the resistance genes. If
required gene is taken up, one of
the resistance genes will be broken
up and won't work, whilst the other
will.
3) Replica plating is then
used. This is where the
bacteria grow and form
colonies. These are tested
on materials made with
the chemicals tied into the
resistant genes.
4) By seeing which bacteria colonies
grow on one growth material and not
the other, we know which have taken up
the required genes.
5) The transformed
bacteria are then
produced on a large
scale.
Example: Golden Rice.
Vitamin A deficiency can cause
irreversible blindness, and only comes
from animal sources in the diet.
However, it can be derived from a
precursor called beta-carotene, which
is converted into Vitamin A in the gut.
Rice plants (Oryza Sativa)
contain genes that come
for Beta-carotene in the
grain. However, these
genes are switched off.
Thus genetic engineering is
used to insert 2 genes into
the rice genome to
activate the metabolic
pathway in the endosperm
cells.
These genes code for two enzymes.
Phytopene
Synthetase
(extracted from
daffodil plants)
Converts
precursor
molecules into
Phytopene.
Crt 1 enzyme
(extracted from
soil bacterium
Erwinia
Uredova)
Converts the Phytopene
produced by Phytopene
Synthetase into Lycopene.
Enzymes already present into the rice
endosperm then convert Lycopene to a
range of carotenoid molecules, including
Beta-carotene.
Golden Rice
(TM) is said to be
biofortified
because it
contains higher
concentrations
of a particular
nutrient. Rice
was then
cross-bred with
natural rice
varieties to
increase
beta-carotene
conc.s further.
Gene Therapy
Somatic Cell Gene Therapy (Body Cells)
Gene therapy by adding genes
(augmentation). Some disorders
are caused by faulty alleles; by
engineering a functional copy into
the relevant specialised cells, the
functional gene product can be
produced.
N.B. Only lasts as long as cell lives.
Can also kill
cells by making
specific cells
(e.g. cancerous
ones) express
genes that
produce
antigens that
lead to their
being attacked
by the immune
system.
Can also silence cells, by
iIntroducing interference
RNA (RNAi) into cells. this
is complimentary to
mRNA of a specific gene,
which it binds to, making
it double-stranded and
therefore unable to be
translated, causing the
mRNA to be broken
down.
Germline Cell Gene Therapy (sperm/egg/zygote)
Means all body cells will contain new gene. There are
concerns about it inadvertently causing a new disease
and the lack of possible consent and interference
with evolution. Currently illegal.
Defintion: Xenotransplant - surgical
procedure in which tissue/whole organs
are transferred from one species to
another.
Example: Pig hearts
Genetically modified to prevent rejection: lack
the enzyme a-1,3-transferase, which is needed
to make antigens on the pig cells that the
antibodies involved in hyper-acute rejection
bind to.
Also insert the human
gene for nucleotidase
enzyme - regulates the
immune response.
Problems
Size of Organ
Animal Rights
Lifespan of organ/animal
Religious beliefs
Body Temperature of pigs is 39 degrees.
Possible disease transfer
Defintion:
Allotransplantation -
refers to
transplantation
between animals of
the same sepcies.