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Applications of Genetics

Applications of Genetics. SBI3U Mr. Tabone. Manipulating Genes. Even before Mendel humans have been using selective breeding to manipulate plant and animal populations Domesticating dogs, increasing milk or wool production from livestock, using seeds from a hardy crop. Selective Breeding.

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Applications of Genetics

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  1. Applications of Genetics SBI3U Mr. Tabone

  2. Manipulating Genes • Even before Mendel humans have been using selective breeding to manipulate plant and animal populations • Domesticating dogs, increasing milk or wool production from livestock, using seeds from a hardy crop

  3. Selective Breeding • Benefits • Desirable traits can be kept and undesirable trait can be eliminated from future generations • Drawbacks • Low genetic variety • Susceptibility to disease • High chance for expression of harmful recessive alleles (eg. albinism)

  4. Hybridization • When 2 different species are bred together to create a new species • The new species is sometimes fertile and sometimes sterile • Eg: Loganberries are fertile hybrids of blackberries and raspberries • Eg: Seedless watermelons are sterile hybrids • Done to create crops resistant to weather conditions or disease, or to have desirable characteristics (no seeds)

  5. Cloning • Cloning is a term that refers to creating an exact copy of an organism from one single cell • This is exactly what happens in mitosis • The biotechnology technique is slightly different from normal mitosis however • Multicellular organisms have two classes of cells • Stem cells and Specialized cells • Specialized cells have specific functions and are quite different from one another (muscle vs. brain vs. skin etc.) • Stem cells can divide and create any type of specialized cell

  6. Cloning • Since specialized cells do not normally divide to create different specialized cells • Muscle cells only divide into muscle cells, they do not create brain cells (for example) • Adults are mostly composed of specialized cells, with very few stem cells • Therefore creating a clone animal out of a specialized cell is difficult • Traditionally stem cells have been used for the purpose of cloning

  7. Cloning • Recently there have been many breakthroughs in this area, and some specialized cells can now be turned into clone cells and used for cloning • This is still a very active area of research • Dolly the sheep • Many species of animals have been successfully cloned • All have had short life spans and exhibited many physiological problems, like arthritis, premature aging, and lung disease • Click and Clone

  8. Applications of Cloning • We can genetically modify certain organisms to give them advantageous traits and then clone them to produce several identical organisms • Eg: Producing corn plants that can grow in cold weather, or cows that produce more milk than normal • Cloning allows us to produce several organisms with our specific modifications • We already do this for several of our fruits and vegetables • Homework pg 151 #1-9, 11, 12

  9. Gene Therapy • Using genes to treat disease • Used in two different ways • A normal gene product can be given to affected individuals • Manipulate genes in parents or offspring to treat the disease

  10. Gene Therapy • Using gene products to treat disease • Leptin and obesity • Obese mice lack the receptor for the protein leptin • Leptin controls appetite • Leptin injections can help control obesity

  11. Gene Manipulation • Involves replacing defective genes with properly functioning ones • Eg: replacing the non-functional gene that codes for leptin receptors in obese mice with a properly functioning one • Will often use specially-tailored viruses to deliver genes • Difficult to get copies of the desired gene into enough cells in the target tissues

  12. Gene Manipulation • Problems with immune response to the viruses • Problems with division in the new cell line • Some success has been seen with adenosine deaminase deficiency (ADA) • Defect in a key protein involved in the immune response • Bone marrow stem cells are removed, manipulated, and replaced

  13. Mutation • How are different alleles created? • One way is by mutations • Mutations are changes in the DNA sequence • Since DNA codes from protein synthesis, changing the DNA can alter the proteins made or stop them from being made all together • This can be both useful and detrimental

  14. Mutations • Mutations can be caused several different ways, including; • Substitution • One base pair change • Deletion • Removing a section of DNA • Insertion • Inserting a section of DNA

  15. Mutagens • Anything that alters DNA is labelled as a mutagen • Radiation and several chemicals can act as mutagens • Mutations in somatic cells often go unnoticed • Mutations in gamete cells are passed on • Cancer can be caused by mutation

  16. Sickle Cell Anemia • A blood disorder caused by a recessive mutation on an autosomal chromosome • Blood cells are shaped like crescents instead of their normal shape • Sickle cells are not efficient at carrying oxygen • Being heterozygous for sickle cell anaemia confers resistance to malaria

  17. Genetic Screening • Geneticists can identify if a person has an increased risk of inheriting a disorder • Genes can give an increased susceptibility to certain diseases • Huntington Disease • Autosomal dominant • Onset after 30-40 years of age • Diminished mental capacity and uncoordinated muscle movements

  18. Genetic Screening • Cystic fibrosis • Large amount of mucus lining the lungs and digestive tract • Autosomal recessive trait • Would you want to know if you were susceptible to a certain disease? • Or if your kids would be susceptible?

  19. Genetic Counselling • Counsellors determine whether an individual is at risk of inheriting detrimental traits • Such as sickle cell anemia, or a predisposition for cancer • It is possible that in the future we can know all the susceptibilities and predispositions an individual will have • What implications does this have for society?

  20. Prenatal Diagnosis • Testing a fetus for problems before birth • Process is called amniocentesis • Extracting amniotic fluid (which contains some cells) with a syringe • Guided by ultrasound • Allows parents to be prepared for any special needs before birth

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