Friday, July 19, 2019
Genetic Engineering :: Bioengineering Essays
  Bioengineering, or genetic engineering is an altering of genes in a particular  species for a particular outcome. It involves taking genes from their normal  location in one organism and either transferring them elsewhere or putting them  back into the original organism in different combinations. Most biomolecules  exist in low concentrations and as complex, mixed populations which it is not  possible to work efficiently. This problem was solved in 1970 using a bug,  Escherichia coli, a normally innocuous commensal occupant of the human gut. By  inserting a piece of DNA of interest into a vector molecule, a molecule with a  bacterial origin of replication, when the whole recombinant construction is  introduced into a bacterial colonies all derived from a single original cell  bearing the recombinant vector, in a short time a large amount of DNA of  interest is produced. This can be purified from contaminating bacterial DNA  easily and the resulting product is said to have been "cloned".    So far, scientists have used genetic engineering to produce, for example: -  improve vaccines against animal diseases such as footrot and pig scours; - pure  human products such as insulin, and human growth hormone in commercial  quantities; - existing antibiotics by more economical methods; - new kinds of  antibiotics not otherwise available; - plants with resistance to some pesticides,  insects and diseases; - plants with improved nutritional qualities to enhance  livestock productivity.    Methods:    - Manipulation of the Gene pool, which is related to Hybridization which is the  breeding of species but the species are not the same but they are related.    - Chain reaction is the production of many identical copies of a particular DNA  fragment.    - The utility of cloning is important, it provides the ability to determine the  genetic organization of particular regions or whole genome. However, it also  facilitates the production of naturally-occurring and artificially-modified  biological products by the expression of cloned genes. - Insertion of selectable  marker genes to pick out recombinant molecules containing foreign inserts -    					    
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