Part E: Lecture 39 Flashcards
5 ways of making crop plants
1) Hybridization
2) Spontaneous mutations + artificial selection
3) Induced mutations + artificial selection
4) Transgenic plants
5) Targeted mutations with Crispr
Hybridization examples
wheat, bananas
Hybridization process
taking two plants with wanted traits and breeding them to produce offspring with both traits
Spontaneous mutations + artificial selection examples
corn, tomatoes, cabbages
Spontaneous mutations + artificial selection process
original –> spontaneous mutation –> humans chose the traits they want (fewer vs. more seeds)
Induced mutations + artificial selection examples
many strains of barley, grapefruit (pink ruby red –> gamma rays –> rio red), rice
Induced mutations + artificial selection process
mutagen like gamma rays mutate the plant and humans chose the traits they want (colour)
Transgenic plants (def.)
plants with one or two genes from a different species (transgenes) permanently added to their genomes
transgene structure
promoter (from host organism expressing transgene) + transcribed region (cDNA)
GFP transgene summary
many fluorescent proteins exist now
changing certain aa changes the colour
making transgenic organism steps
1) Make the transgene
2) Inject the transgene into a zygote (DNA repair enzymes will randomly put the transgene into a chromosome)
examples of transgenic organisms
glow in the dark mice
glofish
farmed Atlantic salmon (GH gene from chinook salmon to mature faster)
E.coli + human insulin/factor VIII
why use Ecoli for making human proteins?
well studied
easy to manipulate
easy to grow
making human insulin with E.coli to treat ___
diabetes mellitus
transgene is in which chromosome in bacteria?
bacterial chromosome because it is permanent. if it was in plasmid, you would have to keep selecting for its presence (ampr)