Answers:
Complete sentence: Techniques such as artificial insemination and embryo transfer are primarily employed for animal husbandry.
Complete sentence: Stem cell research represents the groundbreaking event in biotechnology following cloning.
Complete sentence: The ailment associated with the creation of insulin is diabetes.
Complete sentence: The Government of India initiated the NKM-16 to boost aquatic organism/fishery productivity.
Answer:
- Genetic Engineering: Direct manipulation of an organism's genes
- Cloning: Producing genetically identical copies
- Stem Cells: Undifferentiated cells with potential to become various cell types
- BT Cotton: Genetically modified cotton resistant to bollworms
- Golden Rice: Genetically modified rice with beta-carotene
- Recombinant DNA: DNA formed by combining sequences from different sources
- Fermentation: Metabolic process used in food production
Answers:
a) Alterations to the cell's genetic material are executed in the non-genetic technique.
a) Changes in genes of the cells are brought about in genetic engineering.
Genetic engineering involves direct manipulation of an organism's genes, while non-genetic techniques refer to traditional breeding methods that don't directly alter DNA.
b) A gene sourced from Bacillus thuringiensis is incorporated into soybeans.
b) Gene from Bacillus thuringiensis is introduced into cotton.
The BT gene from Bacillus thuringiensis produces a toxin that kills bollworms, making BT cotton resistant to these pests. While BT genes have been introduced to other crops, the statement specifically refers to the well-known BT cotton.
Bacillus thuringiensis
Cry protein gene
Genetic engineering
Cotton plant
BT Cotton
(Pest-resistant)
Answers:
- Genetically Modified Crops (GM Crops)
- BT Cotton (pest-resistant)
- Golden Rice (vitamin A enriched)
- Disease-resistant varieties
- Hybrid seed production
- Artificial insemination
- Embryo transfer technology
- Improved livestock breeds
- Enhanced milk, meat, egg, wool production
- Disease resistance in animals
- Gene therapy for genetic disorders
- Insulin production for diabetes
- Growth hormones (somatotropin)
- Interferon for viral infections
- Vaccine development
- Diagnosis of heart diseases
- Fermentation for alcohol production
- Enzyme production (detergents)
- Organic acids and solvents
- Biodegradable plastics
- Biofuels (ethanol, biodiesel)
- Sewage and waste treatment
- Bioremediation of oil spills
- Pollution control
- Waste-to-energy conversion
- Composting technology
- Bread and bakery products
- Cheese and yogurt
- Wine and beer
- Vinegar production
- Food preservation
- DNA fingerprinting
- Criminal identification
- Paternity testing
- Wildlife forensics
- Disaster victim identification
Therapeutic plants encompass diverse flora utilized for medicinal purposes in traditional and modern medicine systems.
Black pepper, aloe, cinnamon, safflower, sandalwood, ginseng - used for treating boils, sores, and wounds.
Herbs that modify or remove toxins from the body; also called 'blood cleansers' in traditional medicine.
Turmeric effectively stops proliferation of harmful microbes, bacteria, and germs due to its curcumin content.
Antipyretic plants like safflower, sandalwood, black pepper, and Chirayta used in traditional Indian medicine.
Basil, cilantro, apple mint, thyme, fennel, chives, lemon balm, oregano, rosemary - provide aesthetic appeal, aroma, taste, and attract pollinators.
Answers:
- Medicines: Insulin, antibiotics, vaccines
- Personal Care: Enzyme-based toothpastes, skin creams
- Household: Bio-detergents, biodegradable plastics
- Food Additives: Vitamins, amino acids, sweeteners
- Personal Protection: Always use gloves, masks, goggles, and protective clothing to shield hands, mouth, nose, eyes, and ears.
- Correct Concentration: Use only the prescribed concentration or amount as directed on the label.
- Weather Conditions:
- Avoid spraying during very hot, sunny weather
- Do not spray when there are strong winds
- Refrain from applying immediately before or right after rainfall
- Spraying Direction: Never spray in the direction opposite to the wind (always spray downwind).
- Equipment Safety: Containers and buckets used for mixing pesticides must never be used for household purposes.
- Field Entry: Prevent workers, children, and animals from entering treated fields immediately after application.
- Container Disposal: Empty pesticide containers should never be reused for any purpose and must be disposed of properly.
- Storage: Store pesticides in original containers with intact labels, away from food and out of reach of children.
- Post-Mortem Donation Only: Organs like heart, liver, and eyes can only be donated after death, making them extremely precious due to limited availability.
- Life-Saving Potential: These organs can save or dramatically improve lives when transplanted to patients with organ failure.
- Embryonic Stem Cells: Unique cells found in early embryos that can differentiate into any cell type in the body, holding immense therapeutic potential.
- Limited Alternatives: For many organ failures, transplantation is the only cure, unlike conditions treatable with medication.
- Short Preservation Time: Most organs must be transplanted within hours of removal, creating logistical challenges.
- Immunological Matching: Requires close genetic matching between donor and recipient to prevent rejection.
- Ethical Considerations: The source and acquisition of these organs involve complex ethical questions.
- Daily Consumption: We incorporate various processed fruit products like jellies, jams, juices, and preserves into our daily meals.
- Perishability: Fresh fruits are highly perishable agricultural commodities that spoil quickly due to high moisture content and enzymatic activity.
- Year-Round Availability: Processing ensures fruits can be consumed throughout the year, regardless of seasonal availability.
- Processing Techniques:
- Canning and bottling
- Drying and dehydration
- Freezing and cold storage
- Preparation of murabba (fruit preserves)
- Juice extraction and concentration
- Jam, jelly, and marmalade making
- Nutrition Preservation: Modern processing methods help retain nutritional value while extending shelf life.
- Economic Value: Adds value to agricultural produce, reduces post-harvest losses, and creates employment opportunities.
- Convenience: Provides ready-to-eat and easy-to-store fruit products for urban lifestyles.
- Definition: Process of injecting a vaccine into the body to establish either lasting or temporary resistance to a specific disease or pathogen.
- Traditional Vaccines: Historically made using weakened or killed pathogens, which posed slight risk of disease contraction in some recipients.
- Modern Biotechnology Vaccines: Developed as safer alternatives using pure antigen proteins instead of whole pathogens.
- Mechanism:
- Vaccine contains antigens (specific proteins) from the pathogen
- These antigens activate the immune system without causing disease
- Immune system produces antibodies and memory cells
- If exposed to actual pathogen later, body recognizes and fights it quickly
- Advantages of Biotechnology Vaccines:
- Safer with minimal risk of infection
- More thermostable (resistant to temperature changes)
- Longer shelf life
- Can be produced more consistently and in larger quantities
- Examples: Hepatitis B vaccine, Polio vaccine (inactivated), HPV vaccine
- Herd Immunity: When enough people are vaccinated, it protects those who cannot be vaccinated due to medical reasons.
Answers:
- Genetic Engineering Process: Isolation → Insertion → Transformation → Expression
- Fermentation Process: Substrate → Microorganism → Fermentation → Product
- DNA Fingerprinting Steps: Sample collection → DNA extraction → PCR → Electrophoresis → Analysis
- Tissue Culture Steps: Explant → Sterilization → Culture medium → Callus formation → Plant regeneration
- Vaccine Production: Antigen identification → Gene isolation → Expression in host → Purification → Formulation
Answers:
- Insulin: Hormone for diabetes treatment (produced by recombinant E. coli)
- Interleukin: Immune system protein used in cancer immunotherapy
- Interferon: Antiviral protein used to treat viral infections like hepatitis
- Erythropoietin: Hormone that stimulates red blood cell production, treats anemia
- Somatostatin/Growth Hormone: Treats growth disorders and dwarfness
- Factor VIII: Blood clotting factor for hemophilia treatment
Answer:
- Increased Agricultural Yield: Facilitates higher production per hectare despite limited agricultural land area.
- Disease Resistance: Engineered disease-resistant crop varieties reduce expenditure on disease management (pesticides, fungicides).
- Faster Growth Cycles: Development of quick-fruiting varieties leads to increased annual output and multiple harvests.
- Stress Tolerance: Creation of strains that can endure temperature fluctuations, water scarcity, and soil fertility changes.
- Nutritional Enhancement: Biofortified crops like Golden Rice (vitamin A) address malnutrition.
- Medical Advancements: Production of insulin, vaccines, antibiotics, and gene therapies for previously untreatable conditions.
- Environmental Benefits: Bioremediation cleans pollutants; biodegradable products reduce plastic waste.
- Food Security: Helps meet growing global food demand through improved crop varieties and animal breeds.
- High Costs: Genetic engineering techniques involve very high research, development, and implementation costs.
- Viral Gene Risks: When viral genes are used in GM crops, they could potentially combine with crop genes to create more harmful viruses.
- Environmental Hazards: GM crops have been observed to harm non-target organisms like monarch butterflies and other beneficial insects.
- Biodiversity Loss: Widespread adoption of few high-yielding varieties reduces genetic diversity in crops.
- Antibiotic Resistance: Use of antibiotic resistance genes as markers in genetic engineering could contribute to antibiotic resistance in bacteria.
- Ethical Concerns: Issues regarding gene patents, "playing God" with life forms, and animal welfare in transgenic research.
- Socioeconomic Issues: Corporate control of seeds through patents may disadvantage small farmers in developing countries.
- Unknown Long-term Effects: Potential long-term health and environmental impacts of GM foods are not fully understood.
- Gene Flow: Genes from GM crops can spread to wild relatives through cross-pollination, creating "superweeds".
While biotechnology offers tremendous potential for solving global challenges in food security, healthcare, and environmental sustainability, it must be developed and applied responsibly with proper regulation, risk assessment, and consideration of ethical implications. The future of biotechnology lies in maximizing its benefits while minimizing potential harms through careful scientific oversight and public engagement.