Biotech #1
carboxyl
(-COOH) fatty acids, amino acids
amino
(-NH2) amino acids
hydroxyl
(-OH) alchohols, carbohydrates
nucleus
10% of cell's interior, nuclear envelope, DNA, and nucleolus
carbohydrates
1:2:1 ration of C, H, O. polysacharrides (largu sugars): starches, glucose, chitin, cellulose, main source of energy
molecule/organelle
2+ atoms
proteins
70% of dry weight of a cell, average cell makes over 2000 different proteins, are polymers of amino acids, 20 aminos, folded 3D structure whose shape and fn depend on seq of amino acids
most common elements
CHNOPSCaFe
phosphate (-PO4)
DNA
bacteria
E. Coli, streptococcus, staphylococcus
Francis Collins and Craig Venter
Human genome project, sequences entire genome
What is biotech?
Using scientific methods w/ living organisms to produce new products or new forms of organisms
molecular BT
alters genetic makeup to achieve goals, aka making transgenic organisms
amino acids =
amino group and carboxyl group attached to central carbon
transgenic orgs
an org that has been genetically modifies (GMO,GEO)
fungi
aspergillus
diagnostic
basic science(how and why), discovery and production of new products
eukaryotic cells
bigger, need oxygen, multi-cellular, DNA is in nucleoid region, membrane bound organelles
peptide bond
bond between amino acids
polymerization
bonding of monomers to make polymers
hydrolosis
breaking down polymers into smaller monomers
phospholipids
building blocks of cellular membranes. one end hydrophobic, one end hydrophilic
dehydration synthesis
builds polymers from monomers
4 types of organic macromolecules
carbohydrate, lipid, protein, nucleic acid
fatty acid
carbon chain with carboxyl group ending
common functional groups
carboxyl, hydroxl, amino, phosphate
enzymes
catalysits used to speed up chemical reactions, lowers amount of energy needed, only one enzyme for each reaction
microtubules
cell mobility, cell divions, movement of organelles, and maintaining cell shape
animal cell v. plant cell
centrioles vs. cell wall and chloroplasts
industrial/environmental
cleaner processes to produce less waste, use less energy, water, harmful chemicals
Ian Wilmut
cloned a mammal from an adult somatic cell (Dolly the sheep, died of lung disease)
ribosomes
collection of about 70 proteins and 4 strands of RNA that assembles proteins
cytoplasm
comprises 50% of cell's interior, site where most cellular activities occur, consists of water, salts, nutrients and proteins
lysosome
contains strong acids and enzymes whose functions include: digesting food, breaking down foreign substances, recycling of cellular components for reuse, role in apoptosis
Craig Venter
creation of a bacterial cell controlled by a a chemically synthesized genome, created artificial life
Rosalind Franklin
determined DNA had a helical structure (x-ray diffraction)
Walter Sutton and Theodor Boveri
developed chromosomal theory of inheritance
uses of BT
diagnostic research, medical and pharmaceutical, agricultural, industrial + environmental
Anton van Leeuwenhoek
discovered cells: bacteria, protists, red blood cells
Gregor Mendel
father of genetics
classical BT
fermentation, creation of meds, breeding
ancient biotech
food and shelter, domestication of animals
sterols
four ring structure
nucleotides
fuel the cell and coordinate its metabolism, carry genetic info
HeLa cells
human epithelial cells, from cervical cancer cells, 1st human cells continuously grown in culture
lipids
hydrophobic. fats, oils, phospholipids, waxes, sterols
saturated fat
if carbons all make 4 bonds
Vero Cells
kidney cells from African green monkey used to screen for E coli toxins, host cell for growing virus and eukaryotic parasites, influenza vaccine developments
fats and oils made by
linking fatty acid chains and glycerol
Uses of biotech
make/modify product, improve plants and animals, develop microorganisms
endoplasmic reticulum
makes about 10% of cell's volum. Rough ER (RER) modifies proteins by adding sugars and later the the smooth ER will synthesize lipids
modern BT
manipulation genetics with genetic engineering
genetic engineering
manipulation of genes (aka recombinant DNA [rDNA])
tissue
many cells with functions
organ systems
many organs with functions
organ
many tissues with functions
Cis and Trans
molecules enter of Cis face of golgi, exit on trans face
monomers to organic molecules
monosaccharides to polysaccharides, amino acids to proteins
medical and pharm.
more than 400 BT drug products and vaccines in clinical truals targeting more than 200 diesases
agricultural
more than 7 mil farmers around the world grew GMOs each of the last 5 years, breeding/engineering livestock, biopesticides
microfilaments
muscle contractions, cytoplasmic streaming, cell divisons
cytoskeletion
network of fibers within cytoplasm
two types of biotech
organismic and molecular
commons GMOs
papaya, soybeans, corn
nucleic acids
polymers of nucleotides, DNA and RNA
Chinese Hamster Ovary cells (CHO)
produce proteins that increase RBC production, treats anemia
apoptosis
programmed cell death
evolution of eukaryotic cell
prokaryote ingests aerobic bacteria, aerobes turn into mitochondria, prok. also ingests cyanobacteria, which become chloroplasts, this is now a plant cell
Watson and Crick
proposed double helix model for DNA
golgi
receives proteins and lipids from ER and packages them into vesicles and labels them for final destination (outside the cell)
ethical inquiry
seeks what is the best course of action and provides reasons for why that action is best
mitochondrion
site of cellular respiration, converts food molecule into a form of energy usable by your cells
chloroplast
site of photosynthesis, solar panel of cell. only plants have chloroplasts
prokaryotic cells
smaller, don't need oxygen, single cellular, DNA is in nucleus, no membrane bound organelles
atom
smallest unit of chemical element
cell
smallest unit of living thing
bioethics?
subdivision of ethics that involves decisions made in science and medicine
why is BE important?
technical advances in science are increasting at a rapid rate, should we do these things? BE analysis helps make these decisions
what is ethics
the study of moral standards and how they affect conduct
organismic BT
uses intact organisms, does not alter genetic material, crosses two individuals
substrate
what the enzyme works on
Thomas Hunt Morgan
worked with fruit flies, found eye color was on x-chromosome, and that specific genes are on specific chromosome