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Karan J

Genetic Engineering Methods - 0 views

  • The first technique of genetic engineering, the plasmid method, is the most familiar technique of the three, and is generally used for altering microorganisms such as bacteria. In the plasmid method, a small ring of DNA called a plasmid (generally found in bacteria) is placed in a container with special restriction enzymes that cut the DNA at a certain recognizable sequence. The same enzyme is then used to treat the DNA sequence to be engineered into the bacteria; this procedure creates "sticky ends" that will fuse together if given the opportunity. Next, the two separate cut-up DNA sequences are introduced into the same container, where the sticky ends allow them to fuse, thus forming a ring of DNA with additional content. new enzymes are added to help cement the new linkages, and the culture is then separated by molecular weight. Those molecules that weigh the most have successfully incorporated the new DNA, and they are to be preserved. The next step involves adding the newly formed plasmids to a culture of live bacteria with known genomes, some of which will take up the free-floating plasmids and begin to express them. In general, the DNA introduced into the plasmid will include not only instructions for making a protein, but also antibiotic-resistance genes. These resistance genes can then be used to separate the bacteria which have taken up the plasmid from those that have not. The scientist simply adds the appropriate antibiotic, and the survivors are virtually guaranteed (barring spontaneous mutations) to possess the new genes.
  • Next, the scientist allows the successfully altered bacteria to grow and reproduce. They can now be used in experiments or put to work in industry. Furthermore, the bacteria can be allowed to evolve on their own, with a "selection pressure" provided by the scientist for producing more protein. Because of the power of natural selection, the bacteria produced after many generations will outperform the best of the early generations. Many people strongly object to the plasmid method of genetic engineering because they fear that the engineered plasmids will be transferred into other bacteria which would cause problems if they expressed the gene. Lateral gene transfer of this type is indeed quite common in bacteria, but in general the bacteria engineered by this method do not come in contact with natural bacteria except in controlled laboratory conditions. Those bacteria that will be used in the wild - for example, those that could clean up oil spills - are generally released for a specific purpose and in a specific area, and they are carefully supervised by scientists.
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    This is fine. Pick one of these that is RELEVANT to your topic and find a description of that technique.
Romy Kedem

Ethics of Genetic Engineering - 1 views

  • Benefit to All The strongest defense as well as offense of Genetic engineering is its benefit to everyone. The Organ Donor list can be demolished in just a few years. Genetically modified animals yield healthier foods, and healthier foods yield healthier americans, which solves the problem of the century. Besides the current problems we have, the future of Genetic Engineering has far more options. Children can be born with no defects and be immune to most fatal diseases. These reasons are presented and yet no one seems to believe in Genetic Engineering.
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    You haven't tagged it as blogs
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    what media type is this?
Karan J

Beware The Engineered Salmon | Ethan Bearman's Blog - 0 views

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    this is not a very good blog post. It doesn't provide any evidence or argument to support the viewpoint.
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    I posted another blog
Karan J

Genetically Engineering Intelligent Babies - Horizon: Are We Still Evolving? Preview - ... - 0 views

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    This is not a news story
Romy Kedem

EBSCOhost: Weighing in on Genetic Engineering and Morality: Students Reveal Their Idea... - 0 views

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    what media type is this? Your tags are not correct
Romy Kedem

Genetically engineering 'ethical' babies is a moral obligation, says Oxford professor -... - 0 views

  • Professor Julian Savulescu said that creating so-called designer babies could be considered a "moral obligation" as it makes them grow up into "ethically better children". The expert in practical ethics said that we should actively give parents the choice to screen out personality flaws in their children as it meant they were then less likely to "harm themselves and others". The academic, who is also editor-in-chief of the Journal of Medical Ethics, made his comments in an article in the latest edition of Reader's Digest. He explained that we are now in the middle of a genetic revolution and that although screening, for all but a few conditions, remained illegal it should be welcomed.
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    This is not a cutting edge technique
Colin P

Why Clone? - 1 views

  • Cloning animal models of disease Much of what researchers learn about human disease comes from studying animal models such as mice. Often, animal models are genetically engineered to carry disease-causing mutations in their genes.
  • To clone or not to clone: that is the question. The prospect of cloning humans is highly controversial and raises a number of ethical, legal and social challenges that need to be considered.
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    This is a site that show why people clone things
  • ...3 more comments...
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    Just fix your tagging put animal cloning together by putting " " around it and do that with the tagging of the science article too so its one word. This isn't really a science article it's just saying why you should clone and giving pros and cons.
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    I don't think this a science article since it's not very informative on what cloning is and the process.
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    Is this a scientific article? Or is this something different with just lots of information about animal cloning? This link has lots of information about animal cloning but it does not have anything that supports this information.
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    check tags
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    both your team mates are correct. Not a science article
Mahima A

Squishy Science: Extract DNA from Smashed Strawberries: Scientific American - 2 views

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    what media type is this?
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