1 / 55

Animal Biotechnology

Animal Biotechnology. Physiological Needs . Animals need: Food (Nutrients) Oxygen Water Vitamins Minerals Who would have guessed…. Feeding Animals . Animals are not autotrophic They cannot produce their own food This explains why my parakeet died when I was 9….

lyre
Download Presentation

Animal Biotechnology

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Animal Biotechnology

  2. Physiological Needs • Animals need: • Food (Nutrients) • Oxygen • Water • Vitamins • Minerals • Who would have guessed….

  3. Feeding Animals • Animals are not autotrophic • They cannot produce their own food • This explains why my parakeet died when I was 9…. • They must consume other organisms (plants or animals) for energy

  4. Cellular Respiration • Process of converting sugars to chemical energy • Occurs in the mitochondria • Who wants to learn the entire cycle? • Me neither, so here is the simplified reaction

  5. Oops… 1 glucose + 6 oxygen yields 6 water + 6 carbon dioxide + ATP

  6. Other Nutrients • Some nutrients can be absorbed through “environmental conditions” • Whatever that means….. • Sunlight (Vitamin D) is the classic (only?) example of this

  7. Oxygen • Guess why animals need oxygen • You guessed it (didn’t you)! • Cellular Respiration • Comes from the AIR • Occasionally absorbed from water or other sources

  8. Water • Other than air, water is the single most important factor in the survival of all animals • Water is used in many processes and is essential for life • Animals can last for weeks without food (in theory) but only a number of days at best without water

  9. Vitamins • From their diet animals also need: • Vitamin B12 • Vitamin A • Vitamin E • Vitamin C • And all those other ones found in the Flintstones vitamins your parents forced you to eat

  10. Minerals • Animals also need: • Calcium • Phosphorous • Sodium • Etc • Some minerals are toxic to some animals, even in small amounts

  11. Advances in Animal Biotech • Scientists have used biotechnology to create advances in the following areas of biotechnology. • Animal Breeding • Animal Health and Nutrition • Food Production • Pharmaceuticals • Transplant Organs

  12. Animal Breeding • For centuries farmers and ranchers have bred large animals to produce traits such as: • Feed efficiency • Disease resistance • High milk production

  13. Breeding Types • Traditional Breeding – mating of male and female animals producing single offspring. • Selective Breeding – mating of animals with intention to pass favorable traits to progeny.

  14. Limitations of Traditional Breeding • Livestock animals usually produce only one offspring a year, 5-8 offspring in a lifetime and cannot breed until they are 3-5 years old. • Females, such as cows, are usually fertile only about a 12 hour period.

  15. Limitations of Traditional Breeding • A breeding male and female need to be in the same general geographic area. • The sex of offspring are distributed fairly equally between male and female, which is not always desirable.

  16. Modern Breeding • Modern reproductive techniques are making genetic changes in livestock faster and more precise. • We are going to look at; • Artificial insemination (AI) • Embryo Transfer • Semen Sexing • Cloning • Genetic Engineering

  17. Artificial Insemination • Artificial Insemination (Ai) – method in which semen is collected from male animal and inserted into the uterus of one or more females with desirable traits.

  18. Artificial Insemination • Has been used for centuries but not commonly used until breeders discovered how to freeze semen, first calf born from frozen semen in 1953. • Frozen sperm can now be kept for decades and shipped anywhere in the world on dried ice or liquid nitrogen

  19. Artificial Insemination • Benefits; • One superior bull can replace thousands of herd bulls. • Can introduce new and better genetics into a herd. • Disadvantages; • Requires special techniques and equipment.

  20. Artificial Insemination • Process: Female’s stages of fertility are monitored precisely so that insemination can take place during the short period when she is fertile. • Diagnostic tests based on immunoassays are used to check for ovulation and pregnancy.

  21. Artificial Insemination AI is combined with hormonal techniques that are used to • 1) increase the number of eggs produced during a single cycle (superovulation), • 2) accelerate onset of puberty and • 3) coordinate reproductive cycles of a herd of cows (estrus synchronization)

  22. Artificial Insemination • How it is performed..

  23. Embryo Transfer • Embryo – a developing individual from the fertilized union of egg and sperm. • Embryo Transfer – growing embryos are transferred into a surrogate female who carries the embryo to term.

  24. Embryo Transfer

  25. Embryo Transfer • Benefits: • Breeders can save superior female animals for producing eggs and use other cows to carry out the pregnancy • A single superior female can produce embryos for more than 30 offspring a year. • Embryos can be frozen and preserved indefinitely

  26. Embryo Transfer • Benefits: • Embryos can be shipped anywhere in the world • Embryos can be transferred to to animals of different breeds in the same species.

  27. Embryo Transfer • Surrogate – a receiving female animal that carries an unrelated, inserted embryo through pregnancy to birth. • In-vetro fertilization – combining the egg in the laboratory, literally “in glass”

  28. Semen Sexing • Process by which sperm cells are separated by sex. • Can help determine the sex of an offspring in artificial insemination or Embryo transfer.

  29. Semen Sexing • Sperm bearing x-chromosome produces a female while sperm with a y-chromosome produce a male. • In cattle x-chromosomes contain about 3-4% more DNA versus y-chromosomes

  30. Semen Sexing • Scientists use this difference in a technique called Flow Cytometry. • Flow Cytometry – fluorescent dye is added to sperm DNA. Cells with x-chromosomes fluoresce and scatter light differently from those with y-chromosomes. Lasers and light detectors measure the difference, and the information directs the machine to rapidly sort the cells.

  31. Semen Sexing • In 1999 cell sorters produced about 400,000 sexed sperm per hour with about 90% accuracy. • This processes has about a 50% conception rate, with about 90% predictability of the sex of the offspring.

  32. Cloning • Clone – an exact copy of an organism down to the genitic level. • We have seen clones in sheep (Dolly), Cats (C.C.) and cattle (K.C.)

  33. Cloning • Benefits: • Farmers can have herds of superior, identical animals, with desired traits. • Disadvantages: • Loss of genetic variablility • Expense, technical needs

  34. Other Cloning Issues • Cloning in animals is rare because it is EXPEN$IVE. • Usually it is only used in research or to preserve the most outstanding traits and characteristics • The process results in a large amount of tissue damage

  35. Cloning…. • Cloning typically relies on the use of specialized sex cells • However new advances with ennucleation has led to applications for the cloning of other types of cells

  36. Immunoassay – technique using antibodies produced as an immune response to a particular disease-causing agent

  37. Animal Immune System • In advanced animals (everything we will deal with) the Immune System is controlled by the lymph system • White blood cells and antibodies attack any antigens present in the blood

  38. Antigens, Antibodies, and Vaccines • Antigens are molecules that stimulate an immune response • Antibodies are proteins found in the blood that help the body identify and neutralize foreign objects • Vaccines are antigenic preparations used to establish immunity I got most of this from wikipedia….

  39. More on Vaccines • Vacca means cow • Originally used to prevent smallpox by giving people small amounts of cowpox • Different from variolation (innoculation) where you are actually given a small amount of the live virus….. • Vaccines are usually dead or inactivated organisms or purified products derived from them

  40. Mini Project • Research Vaccines and develop a mini-proposal for the development of a vaccine for some disease. • Proposal should include: • Type of vaccine (there are 4 main types) • Brief history of vaccines • Explanation of how the vaccine would be created and then delivered • Where the vaccine would be given (geographically) • Why the vaccine is needed • This is due at the end of class today

  41. Animal Diseases • Biotechnology has a big impact on the identification and control of many animal diseases • Keep in mind that when I say animal that usually refers to us as well…..

  42. Diagnosis • Enzyme-Linked ImmunoSorbent Assay, or ELISA, is a biochemical technique used mainly in immunology to detect the presence of an antibody or an antigen in a sample. • Antibodies in the blood indicate the presence of a pathogen the body is attempting to fight • ELISA tests are usually produced from antigens extracted from research animals

  43. Bacterial Infections • Bacterial infections in animals are tested by culturing samples in an incubator • Different agar media can be used to determine the presence of different bacteria upon examination after growth • We proved we could grow the stuff, wonder if there’s money out there for people that can grow it….

  44. Prevention and Treatment • Animals could be produced with genetic resistance to a number of pathogens • Insertion of appropriate gene segments from naturally resistant organisms could lead to resistance

  45. Needle in a Haystack? Try Needle in a 10,000 acre hay field….. • In order to identify the gene (segment) responsible for a particular trait (like resistance) scientists create Knockout Animals • These are animals (or plants) that do not contain the gene (segment) • This tells us what that gene (segment) does

More Related