Cloning Flashcards

1
Q

What is a clone?

A

An individual that is genetically identical to another/

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2
Q

What are the mechanisms of cloning?

A

Natural, embryo splitting, reprogramming somatic cells and nuclear transfer

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3
Q

How does cloning occur naturally?

A

By asexual reproduction, or if blastomere in two cell embryo splits naturally resulting in monozygotic twins

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4
Q

How does cloning occur by embryo splitting?

A

artificially splitting the embryo into two at early cell stages

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5
Q

How are somatic cells reprogrammed for cloning?

A

Differentiation may be reversible, e.g. in carrots, root cells can be tricked into forming a new plant that is a clone of the original one

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6
Q

What is Somatic cell nuclear transfer(SCNT)?

A

A lab technique for creating an viable embryo with an egg cell and a body cell, DNA from cell combined with fertilised egg that has been enucleated

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7
Q

Why is SCNT controversial?

A

Invasive and many technical problems. Also may be unethical

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8
Q

What two factors allow cloning by nuclear transfer?

A

Nucleus of every somatic cell contains a complete copy of individual genes and a fertilised egg is totipotent

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9
Q

Who cloned the first mammals?

A

Wilmut and Campbell in 1995, cloned sheep from cultured differentiated cells

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10
Q

When was dolly the sheep born and how did they achieve this?

A

In 1996, deprived adult sheep mammary gland cells of growth factor to arrest their development. These cells were fused with enucleated eggs, stimulated and transplanted to a surrogate

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11
Q

What are transgenic organisms?

A

Contains genetic material into which DNA from another unrelated organism has been inserted

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12
Q

Why did Wilmut and Campbell engineer a transgenic flock of sheep?

A

Goal was to create a flock that could produce therapeutically useful proteins, 7 lambs were born and 3 contained the transgender. One contained Human Factor IX, a cold clotting agent used for treating haemophilia

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13
Q

What are the potential uses of cloning?

A
Developmental research, using clones as controls
Conservation
Cloning of elite livestock
Disease resistant farming
Assisted reproductive techniques
Therapeutic cloning
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14
Q

Why is it useful to pair cloning with genetic engineering?

A

Pharming

Xenotransplantation

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15
Q

What is xenotransplantation?

A

the process of grafting or transplanting organs or organ tissue between members of different species

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16
Q

What is Pharming?

A

Technology used to alter an animals own DNA

17
Q

How is cloning used in conservation?

A

Can help threatened species, and has even brought a small number back from extinction

18
Q

What are the problems with cloning for conservation?

A

How can you decide to clone one species over another, and it doesn’t address the reasons for species extinction in the first place

19
Q

What is a common misconception cloning?

A

Doest bring back a loved one, they are only DNA clones, not cytoplasmic ones, have a mutations of their own, as well as being influenced form the environment

20
Q

What are the problems with cloning?

A
Ageing - telomeres get shorter
Large foetus syndrome
Low success rate
Lack of genetic variation
In human cloning may be phycological problems
21
Q

What happens to stem cells when given vitamin A derivatives?

A

Form nerve cells

22
Q

How could they use stem cells to treat Parkinson’s disease?

A

dopamine producing cells in the brain die slowly in Parkinson’s patients, embryonic stem cells can be induced to produce dopamine in rates brain, next step is to develop system in humans

23
Q

What are the moral/ethical problems with cloning?

A

Is it right to clone a human/animal?
is it right to clone for therapeutic purposes?
Issues surrounding the use of embryo cells