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Published byPeregrine Marshall Modified over 9 years ago
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GENETICALLY MODIFIED (GM) ORGANISMS Recombinant DNA technology is producing new genetic varieties of plants and animals Use Ti plasmid of Agrobacterium tumefaciens as the vector GM plant – ex: soybeans and cotton crops receive bacterial genes to make them resistant to herbicides and pests – ex: “golden rice” = rice with a few daffodil genes added. Rice plant can now make B-carotene, needed for vitamin A production in humans. Vitamin A deficiency (and resulting blindness) is a serious problem for ½ of the world who depend on rice as their staple food. Ti plasmid animation
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Genes from other organisms are inserted into their genomes Involves in vitro fertilization and injection of desired gene directly into fertilized eggs Engineered embryos are implanted into a surrogate mother Ex: pigs with human cell lines for organ donation Ex: chickens produce eggs with additional proteins Q: Is it ethical? What are the risks? Transgenic Animals: contain genes from other animals If GM crops pass genes for pesticide and herbicide resistance to weeds superweeds that would be very difficult to destroy
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A clone is an individual created by asexual reproduction genetically identical to a single parent –Cloning has many benefits but evokes just as many concerns To Clone or Not to Clone?
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Nuclear transplantation can be used to clone animals * Reproductive cloning of nonhuman mammals is useful in research, agriculture, and medicine * Therapeutic cloning produces stem cells which can perpetuate themselves in culture and give rise to differentiated cells cloning stem cell research
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