Tag: biotechnology
Questions Related to biotechnology
Genetic engineering is possible because
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We can cut DNA at specific sites by restriction endonucleases
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Restriction endonucleases purified from virus can be used in bacteria
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The phenomenon of transduction in bacteria is well understood
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We can see DNA by electron microscope
Who is the father of genetic engineering?
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Steward Linn
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Stanley Cohen
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Paul Berg
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Kary Mullis
Genetic engineering has been successfully used for producing
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Transgenic mice for testing safety of polio vaccine before use in humans
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Transgenic cow-Rosie which produces high fat milk for making ghee
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Animals like bulls for farm work as they have super power
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All of the above
Transgenic mice are being formed for use in testing the safety of before
they are used they are used on human beings. They are being used to
test the safety of the polio vaccine. The first transgenic cow. Rosie
produced human protein enriched milk (2.4 gms per litre). The milk
contained the human alphalactalbumin. It is a more balanced product for
human babies than natural cow-milk. Bulls with more power are produced
by animal breeding not by genetic engineering. So, the correct answer is 'Transgenic mice for testing safety of polio vaccine before use in humans'.
Xenobiotics is
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Study of waste from bacteria.
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Study of fungi in biotechnology.
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Degradation of dead bacteria.
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Study of waste from non-biological systems.
A xenobiotic is a foreign chemical substance found within an organism that is not normally naturally produced by or expected to be present within that organism. The term xenobiotics is often used in the context of pollutants such as dioxins and polychlorinated biphenyls and their effect on the biota, because xenobiotics are understood as substances foreign to an entire biological system, i.e., artificial substances, which did not exist in nature before their synthesis by humans.
Most widely used bacterium in plant genetic engineering, in relation to nitrogen fixation, is Klebsiella pneumoniae which can fix nitrogen under ................. conditions.
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Aerobic
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Anaerobic
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Laboratory
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All of the above
Klebsiella pneumoniae is a Gram-negative, non-motile, encapsulated, lactose-fermenting, facultative anaerobic, rod-shaped bacterium. It naturally occurs in the soil, and about 30% of strains can fix nitrogen in anaerobic conditions.
Recombinant DNA research uses mostly prokaryotic bacteria and eukaryotic ............... as recipient cells because of their fast reproduction in laboratory conditions.
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E. coli
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Drosophila
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Yeasts
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Fungal hyphae
The basic process of recombinant DNA technology revolves around the activity of DNA in the synthesis of protein. By intervening in this process, scientists can change the nature of the DNA and of the gene make-up of an organism. By inserting genes into the genome of an organism, the scientist can induce the organism to produce a protein it does not normally produce. The genes used in DNA technology are commonly obtained from host cells or organisms called as gene libraries. A gene library is a collection of cells identified as harbouring a specific gene. For example, E. coli cells can be stored with the genes for human insulin in their chromosomes. Vaccines represent another application of recombinant DNA technology. For instance, the hepatitis B vaccine now in use is composed of viral protein manufactured by yeast cells, which have been recombined with viral genes.
It is now possible to breed plants and animals with desired characters through
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Genetic engineering
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Chromosome engineering
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Ikebana technique
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Tissue culture
Genetic engineering, also called as genetic modification, is the direct manipulation of an organism's genome using biotechnology. New DNA is inserted in the host genome by first isolating and copying the genetic material of interest using molecular cloning methods to generate a DNA sequence, or by synthesizing the DNA and then inserting this construct into the host organism. Genetic engineering techniques have been applied in numerous fields including research, agriculture, industrial biotechnology, and medicine. Enzymes used in laundry detergent and medicines such as insulin and human growth hormone are now manufactured in GM cells, experimental GM cell lines and GM animals such as mice or zebrafish are being used for research purposes, and genetically modified crops have been commercialized.
Recombinant DNA technology is related with
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C. Darwin
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Stanley Cohen
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Herbert Boyer
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Both (B) and (C)
In 1973 Herbert Boyer, of the University of California at San Francisco, and Stanley Cohen, at Stanford University, reported the construction of functional organisms that combined and replicated genetic information from different species. Their experiments dramatically demonstrated the potential impact of DNA recombinant engineering on medicine and pharmacology, industry and agriculture.
Modified antibiotics are manufactured by the technique of
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Ultrafiltration
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Ultra centrifugation
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Vernalization
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Genetic engineering
Bacteria were the first organisms to be genetically modified. Plasmid DNA containing new genes can be inserted into the bacterial cell and the bacteria will then express those genes. These genes can code for medicines or enzymes that process food and other substrates.
The enzyme TPA or tissue plasminogen activator is used for
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Dissolving blood clots
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Maintaining plasma content
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Clearing turbidity of juices
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Stimulating thromboplastin production
Tissue plasminogen activator is a clot-dissolving enzyme that is produced naturally by cells in the walls of blood vessels and catalyzes the conversion of plasminogen to plasmin. A preparation of this enzyme is produced by genetic engineering and used to dissolve clots blocking coronary arteries in heart attack and cranial arteries in certain cases of stroke.