Transfer and Cloning of the Insulin Gene
Legend: Plasmid: Plasmids are small circles of DNA found in bacteria cells, separate from the bacterial chromosome and smaller than it. They are able to pass readily from one cell to another, even when the cells are clearly from different species, far apart on the evolutionary scale. Consequently, plasmids can be used as vectors, permitting the reproduction of a foreign DNA by using the bacterial replicating system. cDNA: Human genes composed of coding and non- coding sequences.
The copy of the coding sequences is called cDNA. It can be obtained from
the reverse transcription of messenger RNA. Transfer of the Insulin gene into a plasmid vector.
Cloning the Insulin geneThe recombinant plasmids and the bacterial cells are mixed up. Plasmids enters the bacteria in a process called transfection. With the recombinant DNA molecule successfully inserted into the bacterial host, another property of plasmids can be exploited - their capacity to replicate. Once inside a bacterium, the plasmid containing the human cDNA can multiply to yield several dozen copies.When the bacteria divide, the plasmids are divided between the two daughter cells and the plasmids continue to reproduce. With cells dividing rapidly (every 20 minutes), a bacterium containing human cDNA (encoding for insulin, for example) will shortly produce many millions of similar cells (clones) containing the same human gene. From: BIO. "Biology in Perspective." Washington, D.C.: Biotechnology Industry Organization, 1990. |