8B - Using recombinant DNA technology Flashcards
In vitro advantages
- Produces insulin (medicine)
- Food production (beneficial substances)
- Control of pollution
- Genetically modified plants transformed to produce specific substances
- Financial/environmental advantages
- GM crops can prevent disease
- GM animals can produce drugs, antibiotics, hormones and enzymes
- Cures for diseases
- Genetic fingerprinting in forensic science
In vitro disadvantages
- Expensive
- Time consuming
- Ethics (stealing DNA?)
- Product safety
- Hard to predict consequences
In vivo advantages
- Need to introduce a gene into another organism (vector can deliver it via a plasmid, less artificial).
- No risk of contamination (specific gene cut using restriction endonucleases, sticky ends won’t allow any contaminated DNA to attach as bases will not be complementary.
- Accurate (few if any errors in DNA that is copied).
- Cuts out specific genes (means your specific gene is copied).
- Produces transformed bacteria that can be used to produce large quantities of gene products (can be used for commercial or medicinal use).
How are transformed organisms made?
Using recombinant DNA technology
How can microorganisms, plants and animals all be transformed?
Using recombinant DNA technology
What is it called when microorganisms, plant and animals are transformed using recombinant DNA technology?
Genetic engineering
Explain brief process of in vivo cloning (e.g. insulin)
- DNA fragment containing the insulin gene is located using reverse transcriptase, restriction endonucleases or a gene machine.
- The DNA fragment is inserted into a plasmid vector.
- The plasmid containing the recombinant DNA is transferred into a bacterium.
- Transformed bacteria are identified and grown.
- The insulin produced from the cloned gene is extracted and purified.
In what ways can recombinant DNA technology be used to benefit humans?
Agriculture
Industry
Medicine
How can recombinant DNA technology be used to benefit humans through agriculture?
- Crops can be transformed to give higher yields or be more nutritious. Therefore these crops can be used to reduce the risk of famine and malnutrition.
- Crops can also be transformed to have pest resistance so fewer pesticides are needed, reducing costs and reducing any environmental problems associated with using pesticides.
How can recombinant DNA technology be used to benefit humans through industry?
- Biological catalysts used in industrial processes can be produced from transformed organisms, so they can be produced in large quantities for elss money, reducing costs.
How can recombinant DNA technology be used to benefit humans through medicine?
- Many drugs and vaccines are produced by transformed organisms, using recombinant DNA technology. They can be made quickly, cheaply and in large quantities using this method.
What concerns are associated with the use of recombinant DNA technology?
Ethical, financial and social issues.
What are the ethical, financial and social issues with using recombinant DNA technology in agriculture?
Farmers might only plant 1 type of transformed crop (monoculture). This could make the whole crop vulnerable to the same disease because the plants are genetically identical. Monoculture also reduces biodiversity which could damage the environment.
Possibility of ‘superweeds’ - weeds resistant to herbicides. These could occur if transformed crops interbreed with wild plants. There could then be an uncontrolled spread of recombinant DNA, with unknown consequences.
Organic farmers can have their crops contaminated by wind-blown seeds from nearby genetically modified crops. This means they can’t sell their crop as organic and may lose their income.
What are the ethical, financial and social issues with using recombinant DNA technology in industry?
Anti-globalisation activists oppose globalisation. A few, large biotechnology companies control some forms of genetic engineering. As the use of this technology increases, the company gets larger and more powerful which may force smaller companies out of business.
Without proper labelling some people think they won’t have a choice about whether to consume food made using genetically engineered organisms.
Some consumer markets won’t import GM foods and products and this can cause an economic loss to producers who have traditionally sold to those markets.
What are the ethical, financial and social issues with using recombinant DNA technology in medicine?
Companies who own genetic engineering technologies may limit the use of technologies that could be saving lives.
Some people worry this technology could be used unethically, e.g. to make ‘designer babies’ - this is currently illegal.