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What is cloning?

What is cloning?. “assisted reproductive technology” Ability to create genetically identical organisms by transferring genetic information from one animal into an egg cell Cloning does NOT change DNA. Naturally Occurring Clones. Why clone?. Helps to maintain high quality livestock

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What is cloning?

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  1. What is cloning? • “assisted reproductive technology” • Ability to create genetically identical organisms by transferring genetic information from one animal into an egg cell • Cloning does NOT change DNA Naturally Occurring Clones

  2. Why clone? • Helps to maintain high quality livestock • Humans would eat the offspring of clones, not the clone itself (ex. chickens from the Clone movie) • Quickly reproduces high quality livestock • Can be used to protect endangered species • Could help cure diseases and support organ transplants (called Therapeutic Cloning) • Could allow infertile people to have children

  3. How is an organism cloned? • Artificial Embryo Twinning • Somatic Cell Nuclear Transfer

  4. How is an organism cloned? • Artificial Embryo Twinning • Sperm cell fertilizes egg cell (cell is now called embryo) • Embryo naturally splits in two • Scientist splits the two cells and puts them in separate Petri dishes • The cells divide and grow • Cells go into surrogate mothers • Identical twins are born

  5. How is an organism cloned? • Somatic Cell Nuclear Transfer • Start with somatic cell (all chromosomes are included) • Empty nucleus from an egg cell • Use electric shock to cause somatic cell and egg cell to join (cell now called an embryo) • Place embryo into surrogate mother • Embryo grows and develops until clone is birthed

  6. Successfully Cloned Animals

  7. Risks of Cloning • High failure rate • Success rate of 0.1 - 3%, • For every 1000 tries, 30 clones are made • Clones are much bigger at birth and have abnormally large organs • Can lead to breathing problems, blood flow problems, kidney or brain malformations, and impaired immune systems

  8. Costs • Cloning a cow costs between $10,000 and $20,000

  9. Genetic Technology/Engineering • Genetic Technology provides opportunities to change plants and animals genetically • It can change the living world as we know it • Includes: 1.) Selective breeding 2.) Biotechnology/genetic engineering: Genetically Modified organisms

  10. 1.) Selective Breeding • Selective breeding is used to produce organisms with desired traits • 2 ways to selectively breed: • Hybridization: Crossing two dissimilar organisms to bring the best traits from both together • ex. Limequat and Tangelo • Inbreeding: Crossing two very similar or closely related individuals in order to maintain a desired trait • ex. Dog breeding

  11. Selective Breeding • Hybridization: ex. Limequat and Tangelo • Inbreeding: ex. Dog breeding

  12. 2.) Biotechnology/genetic engineering • Biotechnology/Genetic engineering involves manipulating DNA to transform organisms • makes it possible to cross genes that would not normally happen in nature • involves cutting DNA from one organism and inserting into the DNA of another (creates recombinant DNA) • transgenic organisms – contain functional recombinant DNA from an organism of a different genus

  13. Genetic Engineering: How do you insert DNA? 3 step process: 1.) Isolate foreign DNA • Uses restrictive enzymes – bacterial proteins that can cut DNA strands into specific nucleotide sequences 2.) Attach DNA fragment to a carrier • uses vectors • mechanical – micropipette, gene gun • biological – virus, plasmid (bacterial DNA) 3.) Transfer into host organism

  14. Biotechnology/Genetic Engineering: • Genetic Engineering results in: • Transformation: New DNA put into a new cell • Transgenic Organisms: Contains genes from other species

  15. Genetic Modification • Combination of biotechology/genetic engineering and selective breeding • Results in genetically modified organisms (GMOs) • Almost everything has been genetically modified • Usually used to make things bigger and better • Used a lot today with food

  16. Possible Benefitsof GM Foods • Easing of world hunger • Development of crops that can be grown in marginal soil • Reduced strain on nonrenewable resources • Development of drought resistant crops • Development of salt-tolerant crops • Development of crops that make more efficient use of nitrogen and other nutrients

  17. Possible Benefits of GM Foods • Reduced use of pesticides and herbicides • Development of pest resistant crops • Reduced herbicide use is better for the environment and reduces costs for farmers

  18. Possible Benefits of GM Foods • Improved crop quality • Development of frost resistant crops • Development of disease resistant crops • Development of flood resistant crops • Improved nutritional quality • Development of foods designed to meet specific nutritional goals

  19. Who makes sure GM foods are safe? • Government agencies regulate GM foods • GM foods in the United States are required to be labeled only if the nutritional value is changed or a new allergen is introduced.

  20. Possible Risks of GM Foods • Insects might develop resistance to pesticide-producing GM crops • Herbicide-tolerant crops may cross-pollinate weeds, resulting in "superweeds"

  21. Possible Risks for GM Foods • Certain gene products may be allergens, thus causing harm to human health • There may be unintended harm to wildlife and beneficial insects Photo courtesy of T. W. Davies, Cal. Acad. of Sciences.

  22. Other Genetic Technologies: Gel Electrophoresis: A method used to determine exactly what DNA fragments have been formed by restriction enzyme cutting • fragments placed in “wells” formed in gel • electric field is applied forming +/- ends • DNA fragments separate based on size and charge (smallest moves farthest away from wells)

  23. Human Genome Project • Began in 1990. • The goal was to analyze the entire human DNA sequence (6 billion base pairs) • Originally scheduled to be completed in 2005 • In June 2003, the map was completed • Cloning may be the next step

  24. Human Genome Project

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