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Published byRandolf Barnett Modified over 9 years ago
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Genetic Engineering Bioethics
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Who we are University of Chicago iGEM team “International Genetically Engineered Machines” Competition Create a genetically modified organism or “machine” every summer 10 weeks, 6-12 undergraduates and highschoolers 1 weekend at MIT Lots of prizes
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What is Genetic Engineering?
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Who are Genetic Engineers? Mother nature Farmers Scientists
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Spider Silk Creation of artificial spider silk by Nexia, a biotech company Spider silk protein created by goats in their milk, then spun into silk However, still not comparable to actual spidersilk
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Insulin Insulin—originally isolated from cows and pigs 1982 – Humulin, a biosynthetic human insulin Attempting to optimize insulin production by expressing them in different things Insert human insulin gene into bacteria
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Penicillin Directed evolution of penicillin strains Inserted genes to make erythromycin (penicillin substitute) into E Coli, which totally worked
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Genetic Engineered Foods I Pest resistance Herbicide tolerance Disease resistance Cold/drought tolerance More nutrition Soil remediation Pros
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Genetic Engineer Foods II Pusztai potato data Pusztai reportedly fed rats potatoes genetically modified to have snowdrop lectin (which is an insecticide). the rats had stunted growth + immune system damage Controversy: confusion over the lectin was from snowdrop (cool) or jackbean (poisonous) research republished in october 1999, reviewed by 6 reviewers. "he paper did not mention stunted growth or immunity issues, but reported that rats fed on potatoes genetically modified with the snowdrop lectin had "thickening in the mucosal lining of their colon and their jejunum" when compared with rats fed on non modified potatoes" Case Study
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Genetic Engineered Foods: Fears "Human health effects can include higher risks of toxicity, allergenicity, antibiotic resistance, immune-suppression and cancer. As for environmental impacts, the use of genetic engineering in agriculture could lead to uncontrolled biological pollution, threatening numerous microbial, plant and animal species with extinction, and the potential contamination of non-genetically engineered life forms with novel and possibly hazardous genetic material." (http://www.centerforfoodsafety.org/geneticall7.cfm)http://www.centerforfoodsafety.org/geneticall7.cfm Unintended harm to other organisms Reduced effectiveness of pesticides Gene transfer to non-target species Allergies Unknown effects
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Genetic Engineered Foods IV Royal Society of Medicine says no ill effects from GM foods US National Academies of Sciences says no ill effects from GM foods Sources: RSM: http://jrsm.rsmjournals.com/cgi/content/full/101/6/290http://jrsm.rsmjournals.com/cgi/content/full/101/6/290 US NAS: http://www.nap.edu/catalog.php?record_id=10977#tochttp://www.nap.edu/catalog.php?record_id=10977#toc What people are worried about are LONG TERM effects; everything is based on only 15 years of research Official Word on Safety
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Ethics good summary of fears: http://www.actionbioscience.org/biotech/glenn.htmlhttp://www.actionbioscience.org/biotech/glenn.html crossing species boundaries? (blurring the line btwn people and other things) disease transmission - antibiotic strains of stuff that weren't antibiotic alteration of animals for food Altered species w/ human genes - humans? genetic alteration of kids/eugenics Foodchain issues/local, global effects
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