Selective Breeding, Genetic Modification and Cloning Flashcards

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1
Q

How can selective breeding be used to develop plants or animals with desired characteristics?

A

Select the plants or animals with desired characteristics beneficial to humans
Breed these plants or animals together
Choose the offspring with desired characteristics and breed these together
Repeat over many generations

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2
Q

What desired characteristics may be sought after in plants or animals?

A

Disease resistance
Higher crop/meat/milk yield
Appearance/taste
Resistance to certain conditions

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3
Q

What are problems with selective breeding?

A

Inbreeding, causing a reduction in the gene pool and a lack of varierty which can lead to harmful genetic defects and vulnerability to the same disease
Ethical concerns

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4
Q

How do restriction enzymes and ligase work to cut out a gene from an organism and insert it into a plasmid?

A

The gene to be inserted is located in the original organism
A restriction enzyme is used to cut out a gene from a section of DNA, leaving sticky ends (a short section of DNA with unpaired bases)
The same restriction enzyme is used to cut out a section of DNA in a plasmid, leaving it with corresponding sticky ends to the original organism
The gene from the original organism is joined to the sticky ends in the plasmid by ligase enzymes
If the sticky ends are corresponding, an unbroken section of DNA will be formed in the plasmid and it will become a recombinant plasmid

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5
Q

How do vectors work to insert a recombinant gene into a cell?

A

Plasmids act as vectors for bacteria and yeast, while viruses act as vectors for humans cells and bacteria
They will be genetically modified (as outlined previously) and then inserted into a cell
This genetically engineered cell will then divide and retain the modified plasma

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6
Q

How can insulin be produced by genetically modified bacteria?

A

The human insulin producing gene is cut out of a human cell and added to a plasmid (in the method earlier described)
This engineered plasmid is inserted into a bacterial cell
This bacterial cell will multiply, making many bacterial cells all producing insulin
This bacteria can then be placed inside a fermenter where the conditions are controlled to mass produce insulin

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7
Q

How can genetically modified plants be used to improve food production?

A

Plants can have DNA inserted into them from other organisms
This can provide them with favourable characteristics
They be modified to: Produce a poison that renders them resistant to pests, become resistant to herbicides so only weeds are killed when sprayed, grow faster and with more food, contain more nutrients, be drought or disease resistant
Most of these things will improve crop yield as well as the quality of the food

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8
Q

What are the disadvantages of genetically modified crops?

A

Risk of the inserted gene being transferred to nearby plants, meaning weeds will become herbicide/disease resistant and can spread
The use of herbicides to kill all other plants can reduce biodiversity
The resistance to pests can reduce biodiversity of bees etc.
The seeds and fruit is more expensive, and many people are conceptually challenged by GM crops

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9
Q

How does the process of micropropagation produce clones of a plant?

A

Cells known as explants are scraped from the plant you want to clone
They are sterilised, and transferred to a petri dish containing nutrients
They will each grow into a small mass of cells known as a callus, and then each callus is added to a larger volume of nutrient medium with growth hormones to encourage the growth of roots, a stem and leaves
The new plantlets formed are then transferred to soil, giving you a cloned plant

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10
Q

What are the advantages and disadvantages of micropropagation?

A

A plant with very desirable characteristics can be quickly cloned with a gurantee the new plants will possess its characteristics
If you have genetically modified it, this only needs to have been done once
The desired plant will result in a greater yield, better food, etc. and grow faster
However it is very expensive and trained personnel and laboratories are required
The organisms are also all genetically identical so will not adapt to changing conditions and will be vulnerable to disease

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11
Q

What is the process of cloning animals?

A

A nucleus from a body cell of the organism you wish to clone is extracted
An unfertilised egg cell is extracted from a female of that organism and the nucleus is removed
The nucleus from the original organism’s body cell is then inserted into the enucleated egg cell, and a small electric shock stimulates the egg cell to begin dividing to form an embyro
It is then inserted into the womb of a surrogate mother, which could be any female of that organism
The resultant organism is genetically identical to the first organism, and possesses no DNA from any other source

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12
Q

What are the advantages and disadvantages of cloning animals

A

Agricultural animals with desired characteristics can be produced rapidly with a guarantee they will possess the same genes, so genetic modification does not need to be repeated
Yield and quality of animals is therefore increased
Rare species can be preserved
However the new population is less adaptable and are vulnerable to disease
There are many ethical concerns especially as this could lead to the cloning of humans

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13
Q

How can animals be used for producing human proteins?

A

Similar to bacteria producing insulin, an animal such as a sheep is genetically modified, making it into a transgenic organism
This organism now possesses a gene or genes which allow it to produce a specific protein useful to humans, and can be cloned to produce many of this animal
An example is GM sheep that produce milk containing human antibodies for fighting cancer

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