Cloning is the process of creating a genetically identical copy of an organism. The document outlines the history of cloning experiments from sea urchins in 1894 to Dolly the sheep in 1996. It describes the main types as DNA cloning, reproductive cloning, and therapeutic cloning. Reproductive cloning aims to create copies of existing organisms while therapeutic cloning produces stem cells for medical research. The document discusses advantages like maintaining good genetics in animals, risks like low success rates and health issues in clones, and applications in biomedical research and livestock breeding.
Cloning is the process of creating a genetically identical copy of an organism. The document outlines the history of cloning experiments from sea urchins in 1894 to Dolly the sheep in 1996. It describes the main types as DNA cloning, reproductive cloning, and therapeutic cloning. Reproductive cloning aims to create copies of existing organisms while therapeutic cloning produces stem cells for medical research. The document discusses advantages like maintaining good genetics in animals, risks like low success rates and health issues in clones, and applications in biomedical research and livestock breeding.
Cloning is the process of producing genetically identical individuals of an organism either naturally or artificially. Natural cloning occurs through asexual reproduction in bacteria, insects, and plants. Artificial cloning involves techniques used to clone DNA fragments, cells, or whole organisms. The first animal cloned was a frog in 1952. In 1996, Dolly the sheep was the first mammal cloned from an adult cell. Cloning works by transferring the nucleus of a donor adult cell into an egg cell with its nucleus removed. Potential benefits include species preservation and medical research applications like organ transplants. However, cloning faces ethical concerns and technical challenges like low success rates and premature aging.
This document provides an overview of biotechnology and various applications. It discusses cloning in animals and plants. Reproductive cloning involves transferring the nucleus of an adult cell into an egg with its nucleus removed. Recombinant DNA technology transfers DNA fragments between organisms. Stem cells can replicate and form complex structures, and may help treat medical conditions. The document outlines the cloning of various animal species over time. It also discusses cloning endangered species, human cloning for therapeutic purposes, and the in vitro fertilization process.
cell cloning- Therapeutic and reproductive cloningAlisha Shaikh
油
Cloning is a process where genetically identical types of cells, tissues or organism is being produced. There are two types of cloning- Reproductive and therapeutic cloning.
Cloning involves producing genetically identical individuals through asexual reproduction. There are three main types of cloning: gene cloning to copy DNA fragments, cell cloning to duplicate cells, and organism cloning to replicate whole organisms. The cloning process involves inserting the gene of interest into a vector, transforming the vector into a host, and expressing the cloned gene. While cloning has potential medical benefits like creating stem cells or animal disease models, it also raises ethical issues regarding individuality, consent, and reducing genetic diversity.
The document discusses different types of cloning technologies including DNA cloning, reproductive cloning, and therapeutic cloning. DNA cloning involves transferring a DNA fragment from one organism to a self-replicating vector like a bacterial plasmid to generate multiple copies. Reproductive cloning aims to generate an animal with the same nuclear DNA as another through somatic cell nuclear transfer, while therapeutic cloning seeks to produce human embryos for stem cell research. Both cloning techniques are controversial due to safety and ethical concerns.
Cloning- Unlocking the Secrets of Genetic Replication - Cloning Explained - A...Ravi Raj
油
Hi,
For better understanding watch this video
https://youtube.com/live/toU9nTaoLxw?feature=share
Cloning is the process of creating an identical copy of an original organism or cell. There are three main types of cloning:
1. Gene Cloning: This involves making copies of specific segments of DNA, often for research or medical purposes.
2. Reproductive Cloning: This aims to create a whole organism that is genetically identical to another. An example is Dolly the sheep, the first mammal to be cloned from an adult somatic cell.
3. Therapeutic Cloning: This involves cloning cells to create tissues or organs for medical treatment. This type of cloning does not result in the creation of a whole organism but focuses on producing cells that can replace damaged or diseased tissues in the body.
Cloning raises ethical, moral, and legal issues, particularly in the context of human cloning.
Cloning involves producing genetically identical copies of biological material. Researchers have cloned genes, cells, tissues and entire organisms like Dolly the sheep. There are three main types of cloning: gene cloning to copy DNA, reproductive cloning to copy whole animals, and therapeutic cloning to derive stem cells for research and potential medical treatments. While cloning techniques have advanced, human cloning remains controversial due to ethical concerns and lack of evidence it has been achieved. Therapeutic cloning could help medical research but requires embryo destruction.
Cloning involves the production of genetically identical individuals through asexual reproduction. Molecular cloning involves amplifying identical copies of DNA molecules using living organisms. The key steps of molecular cloning are fragmentation of DNA, ligation of DNA pieces in a desired sequence, transformation of cells by inserting new DNA, and selection of successfully transfected cells. Cloning has potential benefits but also risks, and human reproductive cloning remains controversial.
Cloning involves the production of genetically identical individuals through asexual reproduction. Molecular cloning involves amplifying identical copies of DNA molecules using living organisms. The key steps of molecular cloning are fragmentation of DNA, ligation of DNA pieces into a desired sequence, transformation of cells by inserting new DNA, and selection of successfully transfected cells. Cloning has potential benefits but also risks, and human reproductive cloning remains controversial.
Cloning involves making an identical organism through nonsexual means. There are three main types of cloning: recombinant DNA cloning, which transfers DNA between organisms; reproductive cloning, which generates an animal with the donor's nuclear DNA; and therapeutic cloning, which produces embryos for stem cell research. While cloning technologies offer potential medical benefits, current methods have low success rates and cloned animals often have health issues. More research is still needed to fully understand cloning and its risks.
This document discusses genetic manipulation techniques for animals, including somatic cell nuclear transfer (SCNT) cloning. It provides details on the SCNT process, including the Roslin technique used to create Dolly the sheep. Applications of SCNT are described for agriculture, conservation, and medical therapeutics. The document also discusses the success of SCNT, limitations, and ethical concerns regarding genetic manipulation of animals.
Dr. B. Victor is a retired biology professor with over 32 years of experience teaching and researching reproductive technology in fishes. His presentation outlines various forms of reproduction including asexual, sexual, and parthenogenesis. It also discusses cloning technology such as embryo splitting, nuclear transfer, and the three main types of cloning - recombinant DNA cloning, reproductive cloning, and therapeutic cloning. The benefits and applications of cloning as well as techniques for transgenic animal production are also summarized.
Genetic engineering (also called genetic modification) is a process that uses laboratory-based technologies to alter the DNA makeup of an organism. This may involve changing a single base pair (A-T or C-G), deleting a region of DNA or adding a new segment of DNA. For example, genetic engineering may involve adding a gene from one species to an organism from a different species to produce a desired trait. Used in research and industry, genetic engineering has been applied to the production of cancer therapies, brewing yeasts, genetically modified plants and livestock, and more.
Cloning is the process of producing genetically identical individuals of an organism either naturally or artificially.
It is the process of taking genetic information from one living thing and creating identical copies of it. The copied material is called a clone.
Nature has been doing it for millions of years. For example, identical twins have almost identical DNA, and asexual reproduction in some plants and organisms can produce genetically identical offspring.
Cloning in biotechnology refers to the process of creating clones of organisms or copies of cells or DNA fragments (molecular cloning).
Cloning involves replacing the nucleus of an unfertilized egg with the nucleus of a donor cell, creating a genetically identical copy. While cloning differs from sexual reproduction by using a single donor's genes, early experiments cloned sea urchins in 1894, salamanders in 1902, and Dolly the sheep in 1996 was the first mammal cloned from an adult cell. However, cloned animals often suffer health issues and low survival rates due to the experimental nature. While some seek pet cloning for $50,000 despite pet overpopulation, it treats animals as products and exploits grieving owners. Human cloning raises ethical concerns about physical harms, effects on families and society, and challenges the idea that humans are uniquely created in God
Transgenic animals are organisms that have been genetically engineered to carry foreign DNA in their genome. This document discusses transgenic animals, including their definition, goals, benefits and risks, types, methods of production, and applications. Some key points covered are: transgenic animals are useful for studying gene function and producing human proteins; common types include mice, fish, cows, and pigs; methods to create them include pronuclear microinjection and using embryonic stem cells or retroviruses; they have applications in research, agriculture, and biotechnology.
There are three main types of cloning: gene cloning, reproductive cloning, and therapeutic cloning. Gene cloning involves collecting DNA fragments from an organism and cloning them into vectors. Reproductive cloning produces a genetic duplicate of an existing organism, like Dolly the sheep. It is opposed by some due to safety and ethical concerns. Therapeutic cloning creates embryonic stem cells which researchers hope to use to grow healthy tissues to replace damaged or diseased ones. Cloning offers both potential medical benefits like organ transplants and stem cell therapies, as well as risks like uncertainty in the process, inheriting diseases, and potential for abuse. Any discussion on cloning must consider both its value and inherent risks.
Genetic engineering techniques allow scientists to modify the DNA of living organisms. Some key techniques include selective breeding to concentrate desirable traits, hybridization to combine traits from different organisms, cloning to create genetically identical copies, and gene splicing to transfer individual genes between unrelated species. Genetic engineering has applications in medicine, agriculture, and research, but also raises ethical concerns about unintended consequences for human health and the environment.
This document discusses cloning in animals and humans. It begins by defining different types of cloning such as molecular cloning, cellular cloning, and embryo twinning. It then discusses the history of cloning, including early experiments in the late 19th century and successful cloning of frogs in 1952. Major milestones are highlighted, such as Dolly the sheep in 1996 being the first mammal cloned from an adult cell. The steps in cloning are outlined along with issues regarding cloning animals and humans, including religious concerns about playing God, ethical issues around treating clones as property, and potential medical issues in cloned offspring.
International academy of ecology and medicineFazil Ajaz
油
This document discusses cloning in animals and humans. It begins by defining different types of cloning such as molecular, cellular, embryo twinning, and reproductive cloning. It then discusses the history of cloning, including early experiments in the late 19th century and successful cloning of frogs in 1952. Major milestones are highlighted, such as Dolly the sheep in 1996 being the first mammal cloned from an adult cell. The steps in cloning are outlined along with issues regarding cloning animals and humans, including religious concerns about playing God, ethical issues around treating clones as property, and potential medical issues in cloned offspring.
The document discusses genetic engineering, stem cells, and cloning. It defines genetic engineering as the manipulation of an organism's DNA to produce desired traits, but notes it is an imprecise technology. Stem cells are cells that can differentiate into other cell types and have potential medical applications, but their use is controversial. Cloning produces genetically identical organisms and there are three main types, but cloning techniques remain risky and result in many failed pregnancies or deformities in animals.
The document discusses cloning and the cloning process. It defines cloning as processes used to produce genetically identical copies. It describes Dolly the sheep, the first mammal cloned from an adult cell. The process of cloning involves transferring the nucleus of a donor adult cell into an egg cell that has had its nucleus removed. The egg is then placed in a surrogate womb to mature. Cloning has produced genetically identical animals like cows, sheep, and mice. However, clones do not always look identical as environment also affects development.
This document discusses bioethics issues involved in cloning. It begins by defining bioethics and the different types of cloning technologies, including recombinant DNA technology, reproductive cloning, and therapeutic cloning. Reproductive cloning aims to generate an organism with the same nuclear DNA as another, while therapeutic cloning destroys embryos to harvest stem cells. The document outlines various bioethical considerations that must be addressed for cloning research, including risks, consent, and respect for subjects. It discusses specific ethical issues around animal cloning, human cloning, and religious and legal perspectives on cloning. Overall, the summary provides a high-level overview of the key bioethics topics related to cloning technologies.
Cloning involves producing genetically identical individuals through asexual reproduction. There are three main types of cloning: gene cloning to copy DNA fragments, cell cloning to duplicate cells, and organism cloning to replicate whole organisms. The cloning process involves inserting the gene of interest into a vector, transforming the vector into a host, and expressing the cloned gene. While cloning has potential medical benefits like creating stem cells or animal disease models, it also raises ethical issues regarding individuality, consent, and reducing genetic diversity.
The document discusses different types of cloning technologies including DNA cloning, reproductive cloning, and therapeutic cloning. DNA cloning involves transferring a DNA fragment from one organism to a self-replicating vector like a bacterial plasmid to generate multiple copies. Reproductive cloning aims to generate an animal with the same nuclear DNA as another through somatic cell nuclear transfer, while therapeutic cloning seeks to produce human embryos for stem cell research. Both cloning techniques are controversial due to safety and ethical concerns.
Cloning- Unlocking the Secrets of Genetic Replication - Cloning Explained - A...Ravi Raj
油
Hi,
For better understanding watch this video
https://youtube.com/live/toU9nTaoLxw?feature=share
Cloning is the process of creating an identical copy of an original organism or cell. There are three main types of cloning:
1. Gene Cloning: This involves making copies of specific segments of DNA, often for research or medical purposes.
2. Reproductive Cloning: This aims to create a whole organism that is genetically identical to another. An example is Dolly the sheep, the first mammal to be cloned from an adult somatic cell.
3. Therapeutic Cloning: This involves cloning cells to create tissues or organs for medical treatment. This type of cloning does not result in the creation of a whole organism but focuses on producing cells that can replace damaged or diseased tissues in the body.
Cloning raises ethical, moral, and legal issues, particularly in the context of human cloning.
Cloning involves producing genetically identical copies of biological material. Researchers have cloned genes, cells, tissues and entire organisms like Dolly the sheep. There are three main types of cloning: gene cloning to copy DNA, reproductive cloning to copy whole animals, and therapeutic cloning to derive stem cells for research and potential medical treatments. While cloning techniques have advanced, human cloning remains controversial due to ethical concerns and lack of evidence it has been achieved. Therapeutic cloning could help medical research but requires embryo destruction.
Cloning involves the production of genetically identical individuals through asexual reproduction. Molecular cloning involves amplifying identical copies of DNA molecules using living organisms. The key steps of molecular cloning are fragmentation of DNA, ligation of DNA pieces in a desired sequence, transformation of cells by inserting new DNA, and selection of successfully transfected cells. Cloning has potential benefits but also risks, and human reproductive cloning remains controversial.
Cloning involves the production of genetically identical individuals through asexual reproduction. Molecular cloning involves amplifying identical copies of DNA molecules using living organisms. The key steps of molecular cloning are fragmentation of DNA, ligation of DNA pieces into a desired sequence, transformation of cells by inserting new DNA, and selection of successfully transfected cells. Cloning has potential benefits but also risks, and human reproductive cloning remains controversial.
Cloning involves making an identical organism through nonsexual means. There are three main types of cloning: recombinant DNA cloning, which transfers DNA between organisms; reproductive cloning, which generates an animal with the donor's nuclear DNA; and therapeutic cloning, which produces embryos for stem cell research. While cloning technologies offer potential medical benefits, current methods have low success rates and cloned animals often have health issues. More research is still needed to fully understand cloning and its risks.
This document discusses genetic manipulation techniques for animals, including somatic cell nuclear transfer (SCNT) cloning. It provides details on the SCNT process, including the Roslin technique used to create Dolly the sheep. Applications of SCNT are described for agriculture, conservation, and medical therapeutics. The document also discusses the success of SCNT, limitations, and ethical concerns regarding genetic manipulation of animals.
Dr. B. Victor is a retired biology professor with over 32 years of experience teaching and researching reproductive technology in fishes. His presentation outlines various forms of reproduction including asexual, sexual, and parthenogenesis. It also discusses cloning technology such as embryo splitting, nuclear transfer, and the three main types of cloning - recombinant DNA cloning, reproductive cloning, and therapeutic cloning. The benefits and applications of cloning as well as techniques for transgenic animal production are also summarized.
Genetic engineering (also called genetic modification) is a process that uses laboratory-based technologies to alter the DNA makeup of an organism. This may involve changing a single base pair (A-T or C-G), deleting a region of DNA or adding a new segment of DNA. For example, genetic engineering may involve adding a gene from one species to an organism from a different species to produce a desired trait. Used in research and industry, genetic engineering has been applied to the production of cancer therapies, brewing yeasts, genetically modified plants and livestock, and more.
Cloning is the process of producing genetically identical individuals of an organism either naturally or artificially.
It is the process of taking genetic information from one living thing and creating identical copies of it. The copied material is called a clone.
Nature has been doing it for millions of years. For example, identical twins have almost identical DNA, and asexual reproduction in some plants and organisms can produce genetically identical offspring.
Cloning in biotechnology refers to the process of creating clones of organisms or copies of cells or DNA fragments (molecular cloning).
Cloning involves replacing the nucleus of an unfertilized egg with the nucleus of a donor cell, creating a genetically identical copy. While cloning differs from sexual reproduction by using a single donor's genes, early experiments cloned sea urchins in 1894, salamanders in 1902, and Dolly the sheep in 1996 was the first mammal cloned from an adult cell. However, cloned animals often suffer health issues and low survival rates due to the experimental nature. While some seek pet cloning for $50,000 despite pet overpopulation, it treats animals as products and exploits grieving owners. Human cloning raises ethical concerns about physical harms, effects on families and society, and challenges the idea that humans are uniquely created in God
Transgenic animals are organisms that have been genetically engineered to carry foreign DNA in their genome. This document discusses transgenic animals, including their definition, goals, benefits and risks, types, methods of production, and applications. Some key points covered are: transgenic animals are useful for studying gene function and producing human proteins; common types include mice, fish, cows, and pigs; methods to create them include pronuclear microinjection and using embryonic stem cells or retroviruses; they have applications in research, agriculture, and biotechnology.
There are three main types of cloning: gene cloning, reproductive cloning, and therapeutic cloning. Gene cloning involves collecting DNA fragments from an organism and cloning them into vectors. Reproductive cloning produces a genetic duplicate of an existing organism, like Dolly the sheep. It is opposed by some due to safety and ethical concerns. Therapeutic cloning creates embryonic stem cells which researchers hope to use to grow healthy tissues to replace damaged or diseased ones. Cloning offers both potential medical benefits like organ transplants and stem cell therapies, as well as risks like uncertainty in the process, inheriting diseases, and potential for abuse. Any discussion on cloning must consider both its value and inherent risks.
Genetic engineering techniques allow scientists to modify the DNA of living organisms. Some key techniques include selective breeding to concentrate desirable traits, hybridization to combine traits from different organisms, cloning to create genetically identical copies, and gene splicing to transfer individual genes between unrelated species. Genetic engineering has applications in medicine, agriculture, and research, but also raises ethical concerns about unintended consequences for human health and the environment.
This document discusses cloning in animals and humans. It begins by defining different types of cloning such as molecular cloning, cellular cloning, and embryo twinning. It then discusses the history of cloning, including early experiments in the late 19th century and successful cloning of frogs in 1952. Major milestones are highlighted, such as Dolly the sheep in 1996 being the first mammal cloned from an adult cell. The steps in cloning are outlined along with issues regarding cloning animals and humans, including religious concerns about playing God, ethical issues around treating clones as property, and potential medical issues in cloned offspring.
International academy of ecology and medicineFazil Ajaz
油
This document discusses cloning in animals and humans. It begins by defining different types of cloning such as molecular, cellular, embryo twinning, and reproductive cloning. It then discusses the history of cloning, including early experiments in the late 19th century and successful cloning of frogs in 1952. Major milestones are highlighted, such as Dolly the sheep in 1996 being the first mammal cloned from an adult cell. The steps in cloning are outlined along with issues regarding cloning animals and humans, including religious concerns about playing God, ethical issues around treating clones as property, and potential medical issues in cloned offspring.
The document discusses genetic engineering, stem cells, and cloning. It defines genetic engineering as the manipulation of an organism's DNA to produce desired traits, but notes it is an imprecise technology. Stem cells are cells that can differentiate into other cell types and have potential medical applications, but their use is controversial. Cloning produces genetically identical organisms and there are three main types, but cloning techniques remain risky and result in many failed pregnancies or deformities in animals.
The document discusses cloning and the cloning process. It defines cloning as processes used to produce genetically identical copies. It describes Dolly the sheep, the first mammal cloned from an adult cell. The process of cloning involves transferring the nucleus of a donor adult cell into an egg cell that has had its nucleus removed. The egg is then placed in a surrogate womb to mature. Cloning has produced genetically identical animals like cows, sheep, and mice. However, clones do not always look identical as environment also affects development.
This document discusses bioethics issues involved in cloning. It begins by defining bioethics and the different types of cloning technologies, including recombinant DNA technology, reproductive cloning, and therapeutic cloning. Reproductive cloning aims to generate an organism with the same nuclear DNA as another, while therapeutic cloning destroys embryos to harvest stem cells. The document outlines various bioethical considerations that must be addressed for cloning research, including risks, consent, and respect for subjects. It discusses specific ethical issues around animal cloning, human cloning, and religious and legal perspectives on cloning. Overall, the summary provides a high-level overview of the key bioethics topics related to cloning technologies.
Mate, a short story by Kate Grenvile.pptxLiny Jenifer
油
A powerpoint presentation on the short story Mate by Kate Greenville. This presentation provides information on Kate Greenville, a character list, plot summary and critical analysis of the short story.
How to Configure Restaurants in Odoo 17 Point of SaleCeline George
油
Odoo, a versatile and integrated business management software, excels with its robust Point of Sale (POS) module. This guide delves into the intricacies of configuring restaurants in Odoo 17 POS, unlocking numerous possibilities for streamlined operations and enhanced customer experiences.
QuickBooks Desktop to QuickBooks Online How to Make the MoveTechSoup
油
If you use QuickBooks Desktop and are stressing about moving to QuickBooks Online, in this webinar, get your questions answered and learn tips and tricks to make the process easier for you.
Key Questions:
* When is the best time to make the shift to QuickBooks Online?
* Will my current version of QuickBooks Desktop stop working?
* I have a really old version of QuickBooks. What should I do?
* I run my payroll in QuickBooks Desktop now. How is that affected?
*Does it bring over all my historical data? Are there things that don't come over?
* What are the main differences between QuickBooks Desktop and QuickBooks Online?
* And more
APM event hosted by the South Wales and West of England Network (SWWE Network)
Speaker: Aalok Sonawala
The SWWE Regional Network were very pleased to welcome Aalok Sonawala, Head of PMO, National Programmes, Rider Levett Bucknall on 26 February, to BAWA for our first face to face event of 2025. Aalok is a member of APMs Thames Valley Regional Network and also speaks to members of APMs PMO Interest Network, which aims to facilitate collaboration and learning, offer unbiased advice and guidance.
Tonight, Aalok planned to discuss the importance of a PMO within project-based organisations, the different types of PMO and their key elements, PMO governance and centres of excellence.
PMOs within an organisation can be centralised, hub and spoke with a central PMO with satellite PMOs globally, or embedded within projects. The appropriate structure will be determined by the specific business needs of the organisation. The PMO sits above PM delivery and the supply chain delivery teams.
For further information about the event please click here.
How to Modify Existing Web Pages in Odoo 18Celine George
油
In this slide, well discuss on how to modify existing web pages in Odoo 18. Web pages in Odoo 18 can also gather user data through user-friendly forms, encourage interaction through engaging features.
Prelims of Rass MELAI : a Music, Entertainment, Literature, Arts and Internet Culture Quiz organized by Conquiztadors, the Quiz society of Sri Venkateswara College under their annual quizzing fest El Dorado 2025.
APM People Interest Network Conference 2025
-Autonomy, Teams and Tension: Projects under stress
-Tim Lyons
-The neurological levels of
team-working: Harmony and tensions
With a background in projects spanning more than 40 years, Tim Lyons specialised in the delivery of large, complex, multi-disciplinary programmes for clients including Crossrail, Network Rail, ExxonMobil, Siemens and in patent development. His first career was in broadcasting, where he designed and built commercial radio station studios in Manchester, Cardiff and Bristol, also working as a presenter and programme producer. Tim now writes and presents extensively on matters relating to the human and neurological aspects of projects, including communication, ethics and coaching. He holds a Masters degree in NLP, is an NLP Master Practitioner and International Coach. He is the Deputy Lead for APMs People Interest Network.
Session | The Neurological Levels of Team-working: Harmony and Tensions
Understanding how teams really work at conscious and unconscious levels is critical to a harmonious workplace. This session uncovers what those levels are, how to use them to detect and avoid tensions and how to smooth the management of change by checking you have considered all of them.
Computer Application in Business (commerce)Sudar Sudar
油
The main objectives
1. To introduce the concept of computer and its various parts. 2. To explain the concept of data base management system and Management information system.
3. To provide insight about networking and basics of internet
Recall various terms of computer and its part
Understand the meaning of software, operating system, programming language and its features
Comparing Data Vs Information and its management system Understanding about various concepts of management information system
Explain about networking and elements based on internet
1. Recall the various concepts relating to computer and its various parts
2 Understand the meaning of softwares, operating system etc
3 Understanding the meaning and utility of database management system
4 Evaluate the various aspects of management information system
5 Generating more ideas regarding the use of internet for business purpose
Eng7-Q4-Lesson 1 Part 1 Understanding Discipline-Specific Words, Voice, and T...sandynavergas1
油
Gene replacement, gene knockingout and its appl9cation
1. GENE REPLACEMENT & TRANSGENIC ANIMALS
WELLCOME TO MY PRESENTATION
Presented By:
Arif Uddin
ID:22215008
Department of Pharmacy
Comilla University
2. 2
CLONING
OUTLINE
DEFINITION
TYPES OF CLONING
HUMAN CLONING
ANIMAL CLONING
ADVANTAGES AND
DISADVANTAGES
RISKS
APPLICATIONS
GENE KNOCKOUT ANIMAL MODELS
OUTLINE
DEFINITION
MODEL ORGANISIMS
KNOCKOUT MICE
USES
TRANSGENIC VS.
KNOCKOUTTRANSGENIC VS.
KNOCKOUT
PRODUCTION OF KNOCKOUT
MICE
SOME EXPERIMENT RESULTS..
APPLICATIONS
LIMITATIONS
4. 4
DEFINITION
It is the process of making a clone , a genetically
identical copy of an organism by replacing the nucleus
of an unfertilized ovum with the nucleus of a body cell
from the organism.
5. 5
HOW CLONING DIFFERS FROM NATURAL
PRODUCTION
Humans and most organisms result from
sexual production. The female egg is fertilized
by the male sperm and an embryo is formed.
The embryos genetic structure is located in
the chromosomes found in the nucleus of
every embryonic cell.
The new organism obtains one half of its
genes from the mothers egg and the other
half from the fathers sperm.
6. 6
BUT IN CLONIG.
The egg nucleus is removed through a
microscopic laboratory procedure and
replaced with a donors nucleus, containing
the unique genes of that individual.
The egg which grows into an embryo , contains
only the donors genes. The cloned organism is
a near genetic copy of its sole parent rather
than a random genetic combination of two
parents.
8. 8
TYPES OF CLONING
1. DNA cloning/ Gene cloning
2. Reproductive cloning (Dolly)
3. Therapeutic Cloning
9. 9
DNA/GENE CLONING
Practiced since 1970
A term used to describe a collection of DNA
fragments derived from the genome of an organism
and cloned randomly into suitable cloning vectors
(plasmids, phages).
The term genomic DNA clone or chromosomal DNA
clone then refers to an individual cell carrying a
cloning vector with one of the cellular DNA
fragments or to a phage isolate with a specific DNA
insert.
11. 11
Reproductive cloning
Reproductive cloning is the production of a genetic
duplicate of an existing organism. A human clone would be
a genetic copy of an existing person.
Some oppose reproductive cloning because of safety
considerations. Animal cloning is seldom successful, and
many scientists believe that reproductive cloning can never
be made safe. Human reproductive cloning would also
threaten the psychological well-being of cloned children,
open the door to more powerful genetic manipulation
technologies, and raise other social and ethical concerns.
12. 12
HOW TO GENERATE A DOLLY?
STEP 1: Udder cells were taken from a donor sheep.cells
were then cultured to switch off their genes and become
dormant.
STEP 2: Unfertilized egg cell was taken from another
sheep.the nucleus was removed leaving an egg empty.
STEP3: THE egg cell without nucleus was fused with the
donor cell using a pulse of electricity. A second pulse started
the cell division.
STEP 4: After 6 days the resulting embryo was implanted into
another sheep (surrogate mother).
STEP 5: After gestation the surrogate mother gave birth to
dolly which was identical to the udder cell donor.
13. 13
Reproductive cloning
Benefits
Maintain good DNA in
animal reproduction.
Cloning geneticallya
modified animals: -
Xenotransplantation (avoid
tissue rejection) - Insulin
producers
Risk
Highly inefficient: - Die
mysteriously - High costs
Morally wrong to
experiment with animals.
Could lead to the cloning of
humans
14. 14
Therapeutic Cloning
Benefits
Produce whole organs from
cloned stem cells.
Produce healthy cells for
transplantation.
Reduce need for organ
donors
Test drugs, understand
diseases
Risk
Killing embryos
in the process
Which creates embryonic Stem Cells. Researchers hope to use
theses cells to grow healthy tissue to replace injured or diseased
tissues in the human body.
16. 16
Human Cloning
The concept of human cloning welcomes the
prospect of making this world a place where
the disorders of a human like the diseases or
the genetic disorders diseases can be
removed.
17. 17
Process of Cloning:
Donor
egg
Remove nucleus
Remove cells from
person to be cloned
Human egg donor
Surrogate
mother
with
cloned
baby
Implant
embryo
into
surrogate
mother
Embryo
Cell
Egg fused
with cell
Fuse cell
and
enucleated
egg with
electricity
18. 18
Animal Cloning
The pet cloning started in 1997 when a billionaire from Arizona wanted to clone
his dog. He paid millions to a company called Genetics saving and clone in order to
clone his dog.
The first cloned cat was born in 2001.
The scientists perform a biopsy to a on a live or very recently deceased animal to
collect DNA.
Next , the tissues are grown and the cells are preserved until the next phase of the
cloning process.
To produce a cloned embryo ,the cells are treated to prevent them from being
assigned to a particular function( hair , skin).
The genetic material is removed from eggs obtained from random cats.
The eggs and cells are fused together by electricity ,resulting in cloned embryos.
Multiply cloned embryos are implanted into female cats during an
artificially induced reproductive cycle. The cats may or may not develop
pregnancies and are monitored by ultrasound.
19. 19
Advantages vs Disadvantages
Advantages
There will be an endless
supply of animals to clone,
and we will never run out of
food from animals, because
we have been able to clone
based on previous efforts, the
most famous of these was the
first ever cloning of an animal,
Dolly the lamb which was a
successful cloning where Dolly
was a healthy lamb.
Disadvantages
Many believe cloning is
quite inhumane, especially
that of religious and some
governmental parties which
dont want to move forward
with this research. They
think life is just too precious
to take away, even if it is a
clone in which we are
testing.
20. 20
What are the risks of cloning?
Expensive and highly inefficient.
More than 90% of cloning attempts fail to produce a viable offspring.
In addition to low success rates, cloned animals tend to have more
compromised immune function and higher rates of infection, tumour
growth, and other disorders.
Many cloned animals have not lived long enough to generate good data
about how clones age.
Appearing healthy at a young age unfortunately is not a good indicator of
long term survival.
Clones have been known to die mysteriously. For example, Australia's first
cloned sheep appeared healthy and energetic on the day she died, and
the results of her autopsy failed to determine a cause of death.
21. 21
APPLICATION
Biomedical research
Animals as drug producers
Animal models
Breeding androgenic body tissue
Xenotransplantation
Livestock breeding and agriculture
Transgenic clones
Changes to agricultural structures
According to FDA Meat and milk from cow, pig, and goat clones, and the
offspring of any clones, are as safe as food we eat every day.
The main use of clones is to produce breeding stock, not food.
23. 23
Gene Knockout
A gene knockout is a genetically engineered organism that
carries one or more genes in its chromosomes that have been
made inoperative.
They are used in learning about a gene that has been
sequenced, but which has an unknown or incompletely known
function.
The gene knock out technology allowed researchers to study
loss-of-function mutations wherein one can infer a gene's
function by observing what happens when the gene is absent or
when mutant copy of the gene is expressed instead of the
normal one.
24. 24
Model Organisims
Any non human organisim used in research
to answer a scientific question
25. 25
Knockout Mice
Mice are the laboratory animal species most
closely related to humans in which the
knockout technique can be easily
performed, so they are a favourite subject
for knockout experiments.
Mice are also cheap, easy to raise and have
a short generation time.
26. 26
Uses
Knocking out the activity of a gene provides valuable
information about what that gene normally does.
Humans share many genes with mice. Consequently, observing
the characteristics of knockout mice gives researchers
information that can be used to better understand how a
similar gene may cause or contribute to disease in humans.
Examples of research in which knockout mice have been useful
include studying and modelling different kinds of cancer,
obesity, heart disease, diabetes, arthritis, substance abuse,
anxiety, aging and Parkinson disease.
27. 27
Transgenic vs. Knockout
Transgenic model Knockout model
Gain-of-function mutations Loss-of-function mutations
Genes are added into a genome to
express a particular protein
Gene are inactivated by deletion or
expression of a mutant copy
Random genomic integration of
transgene
site-specific genomic integration of
transgene
(targeted)
28. 28
Production of knockout mice
Depending upon method of insertion of
artificial DNA into the chromosome of ES cells,
there are 2 methods to produce knockout
mouse in vitro:
o Gene Targeting (Homologous Recombination)
o Gene Trapping
29. 29
Production of knockout mice (by Gene Targeting)
1. Harvesting of Embryonic stem cells from a mouse blastocyst.
2. Introducing the artificial DNA into the ES cells in the culture.
3. Screen ES cells and select those whose DNA includes the new gene.
Positive selection
It involves the isolation of a target cell population by using an antibody that specifically binds that
population.
Positive selection markers are used to enrich for recombination events
Eg. Encoding Antibiotic resistance gene Neomycin
Negative selection
It involves the depletion of all cell types except your cell type of interest.
Negative selection markers used to enrich for homologous recombination events over random insertions
Eg. Use of Herpes Simplex Virus (HSV) Thymidine Kinase (TK) gene
coupled with gancyclovir treatment.
4. Implant selected cells into normal mouse
5.embryos, making "chimeras
Implant chimeric embryos in pseudopregnant females.
6. Females give birth to chimeric offspring, which are subsequently bred
to verify transmission of the new gene, producing a mutant mouse line.
30. 30
Some experiment results..
Knocking out p53 gene
p53, a tumour suppressor gene is deleted or mutated in half
of human cancers.
p53 knockout mice developed normally but developed a
variety of cancers including lymphomas when they grew old.
Thus, the knock out model provided the ultimate proof that
p53 is indeed a tumour suppressor.
31. 31
Knocking out expression of Nhlh2, a basic
helix-loop helix transcription factor in mice
results in adult onset obesity.
32. 32
GDF8 (Myostatin) knockout mouse:
More than twice the muscle mass of a
wildtype mouse.
34. 34
The gene knockout models revealed that cells need more than
one mutant gene to become cancerous.
For example when you knock out p53, it takes many months
for cancer to arise.
Similarly, mice engineered to express a mutant Rb gene
indeed developed tumors, but not the ones researchers were
expecting.
Thus, cells need more genetic alterations than just one.
35. 35
Applications
To determine the function of gene products.
To create mouse model of human genetic diseases.
To characterize genetic regulatory regions.
To establish link between mutant phenotypes &
particular transcriptional units.
36. 36
Limitations
About 15 percent of gene knockouts are developmentally
lethal, which means that the genetically altered embryos
cannot grow into adult mice.
In some instances, the gene may serve a different
function in adults than in developing embryos.
Knocking out a gene also may fail to produce an
observable change in a mouse or may even produce
different characteristics from those observed in humans
in which the same gene is inactivated
#34: Instead of eye tumors, the animals suffered from pituitary and thyroid gland cancers. It was later found that found that a second gene protected the eye cells from cancer, and both mutations were required for tumors to form.