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Cloning and the Green Revolution March 1, 2010 Dr. Olga M. Lazín UCLA Visiting Scholar
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The First Green Revolution The Green Revolution is the name of the phenomenon of modifying agriculture using molecular means in order to improve yield. This method was propagated by Norman Borlaug. Increased output of Agriculture in the Countries of Mexico and India in the 1960s and 1970s.
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The First Green Revolution This method utilized the usage of pesticides, fertilizer, and improved techniques of irrigation. Used the process of “natural selection” to select for the most efficient strains of plants to be used for crops. Crops with favorable traits such as resistance to disease and high yield were selected for.
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Downfalls of First Green Revolution The pesticides used were found to harm both the plants and the animals that ingested these plants, including humans. DDT (Dichloro-Diphenyl-Trichloroethane) is a major example of a pesticide that negatively affects humans and animals. It has been shown to cause reproductive harm, has been linked to cancer, and other illnesses.
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DDT
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Downfalls of First Green Revolution Another downfall to this technique is that it takes a long time (~months to years) and must be done in the field. It is inefficient as the results are often irreproducible and the productive strains can be lost.
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The Second Green Revolution The second revolution focused more on genetic manipulations to create more productive strains of plants. This could be done in the laboratory rather than in the field. Results were reproducible and easily done. Traits like taste, yield, resistance to virus and disease could be selected for.
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The Second Green Revolution This was a very efficient technique that could produce results rapidly (~few weeks)
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Genetic Manipulation You can alter the genes at the nucleotide level. All of the genomes of multicellular terrestrial organisms are encoded in the form of DNA. DNA is made up of a varying sequences of the nucleotide bases Adenine(A), Guanine(G), Thymine(T), and Cytosine(C).
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Central Dogma of Biology DNA is transcribed into RNA where it is translated into a functional proteins. Proteins are responsible for most of the characteristics that organisms exhibit including functionality, taste, and other qualities.
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Cloning These concepts are not as controversial in plants as they are in animals because this type of genetic variation and manipulation occurs in plants naturally. This occurs in animals to a much smaller scale and over evolutionary time (millions of years).
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History of Cloning In 1938 the German scientist Hans Spemann proposed a method to transfer one cell's nucleus into an egg without a nucleus which is the basic method for cloning. In 1972 Paul Berg created the first recombinant DNA molecules.
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History of Cloning In 1973, Cohen and Boyer applied this method and create the first recombinant DNA organisms. In 1977, Karl Illmensee claims to have created mice with only one parent. In 1978, David Rorvik releases a book, In His Image: The Cloning of a Man, which sparked a worldwide debate on cloning ethics.
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History of Cloning In 1980, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that live, human made organisms are patentable material. In 1984, Steen Willadsen, a Danish scientist, reported that he had made a genetic copy of a lamb from early sheep embryo cells a process now known as "twinning.“ This method will eventually be used on cattle, pigs, goats, rabbits and rhesus monkeys. In 1986, Steen Willadsen clones cattle from differentiated cells. In 1986, First, Prather, and Eyestone clone a cow from embryo cells.
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History of Cloning In 1990, the Human Genome Project began, which aimed at sequencing the entire human genome. In 1996, Dolly the sheep became the first animal cloned from adult cells; this was not announced until a year later. In 1997, President Bill Clinton proposed a five year moratorium on cloning.
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History of Cloning In 1997, the same scientists who produced Dolly announced that they had produced a lamb with a human gene in every cell of its body using techniques similar to those used to produce Dolly. In 1997, Richard Seed announced his plans to clone a human. In 1998, Japanese scientists reported that they had cloned eight copies of a single cow, the third mammal to be cloned.
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History of Cloning In 1998, a hybrid embryo created from human leg cells and anucleated cow egg was created; it was not developed due to ethical issues. In 2000, a Rhesus monkey was cloned. In 2000, Britain became the first country to grant a patent for cloned early-stage human embryos. Geron Corporation, which received the patent, said that it did not have the intention of creating cloned humans.
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History of Cloning In 2000, the group that created Dolly the sheep announced that they cloned pigs; there was hope that pigs could be genetically engineered for use in human organ transplants. In 2003, a mule and a horse were cloned. In 2003, the FDA released a study and approved the public consumption of cloned meat.
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Potential of Cloning Can be used to prevent hunger and increase crop yield in Mexico, Latin America, and the rest of the world. Can be used to treat human disease through the study and utility of stem cells.
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