Powerpoint Presentation: Genetic Engineering
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GENETIC
ENGINEERING
Opening the book of life
… or pandora’s box?
The beginnings
1869
DNA isolated
1944
DNA proved to be the
hereditary material
1953
DNA structure
determined
Image Credit : www.chem.ucsb.edu/
© 2010 Paul Billiet ODWS
Working with DNA
1961
DNA can be split on heating and stuck
back together again on cooling
(reannealing)
DNA hybridisation possible
1962
The first restriction endonucleases
discovered
Molecular scissors
© 2010 Paul Billiet ODWS
Working with DNA
1966
The genetic code worked out
Discovered to be a universal code
1967
DNA ligase discovered
Molecular glue
Fragments of DNA can be stuck together
© 2010 Paul Billiet ODWS
Recombinant DNA technology
1973
DNA cloning carried out on bacteria
Gene identified
Cut with restriction enzyme
Spliced into a plasmid using ligase
Plasmid reintroduced into a bacterium
Gene copied whenever the bacterium
divides
Non-bacterial gene can be expressed in
the bacterium
© 2010 Paul Billiet ODWS
Recombinant DNA technology
1977
Rapid sequencing of DNA developed
© 2010 Paul Billiet ODWS
Recombinant DNA technology
1982
Transgenic mice and fruit flies produced
© 2010 Paul Billiet ODWS
Recombinant DNA technology
1983 Polymerase chain reaction invented
1985 Genetic fingerprinting developed
Image Credit: Sir Alec Jeffreys
Image Credit: Kary Mullis
Medecine
1989
Cystic fibrosis gene cloned and sequenced
1990
Trials for gene therapy begin
© 2010 Paul Billiet ODWS
Agriculture
1994
Genetically modified organisms for food
© 2010 Paul Billiet ODWS
Human Genome Project
1990-2003
The human genome worked out
Goals of the human genome project
identify all the approximately 20,000-25,000
genes in human DNA
determine the sequences of the 3 billion chemical
base pairs that make up human DNA
store this information in databases
improve tools for data analysis
transfer related technologies to the private sector
address the ethical, legal, and social issues
(ELSI) that may arise from the project
http://www.ornl.gov/sci/techresources/Human_Genome/project/about.shtml
Genomics
Today:
Over 70 Eukaryotes sequenced
About 25 of these are mammals
Over 350 prokaryotes have been
sequenced
© 2010 Paul Billiet ODWS