Human Heredity: Principles and Issues (MindTap Course List)
11th Edition
ISBN: 9781305251052
Author: Michael Cummings
Publisher: Cengage Learning
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Chapter 13, Problem 2QP
Summary Introduction
Introduction: A clone can be described as an individual who shares common genetic sequence. The process of the formation of identical twins which possess similar genetic material is known as “cloning.” The individuals formed from this process are considered as “clones.”
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For each of the following scenarios, indicate YES (it is cloning) or NO (it is not cloning).
6.
___________ Sperm taken from a male goat is combined with a female's egg in a petri dish. The
resulting embryo is implanted into the female's uterus to develop
7.
___________ A sheep embryo, composed of 16 cells, is removed from the mother's uterus and
separated into individual cells. Each cell is allowed to multiply, creating 16 separate embryos, which
are then implanted in different female sheep to develop to maturity.
8.
___________ A cow with many desirable traits is stimulated with hormones to produce a number of
egg cells. Each of these eggs is fertilized and implanted into a surrogate mother.
9.
___________ Cell nuclei from a recently deceased dog are placed into enucleated egg cells from
another female dog. These egg cells are then placed into the uterus of an additional female surrogate
dog, where it grows into a puppy.
The following diagram outlines how the process of cloning a sheep was accomplished.
Cloning is the process of creating a genetically identical copy of another individual. With Dolly, the first cloned mammal, an egg cell was removed from a donor (B) and the nucleus was removed from the egg cell. Then cells from a sheep's mammary gland were removed from a second donor (A). The nucleus of one of the cells from the mammary gland was fused with the enucleated egg cell using an electrical pulse. The fused cell underwent cell division and at the blastocyst stage was implanted into a surrogate mother sheep.
The fused cell is cultured and is implanted as a multi-celled embryo. During the step where the fused cell begins dividing normally, the cells of the future clone undergo
Select one:
a. fertilization
b. meiosis
c. mitosis
d. gene splicing
What is a fluorophore? If you wanted to fluorescently label a brain cell, describe one way you could genetically label a brain cell using a transgenic approach and give one way you could genetically label a brain cell using a gene targeting homologous recombination approach.
Chapter 13 Solutions
Human Heredity: Principles and Issues (MindTap Course List)
Ch. 13.5 - Do you think the way this issue was handled should...Ch. 13.5 - Prob. 2EGCh. 13.7 - If you were offered the chance to have the genome...Ch. 13.7 - Prob. 2EGCh. 13 - Improving the nutritional value of food has long...Ch. 13 - Improving the nutritional value of food has long...Ch. 13 - Prob. 3CSCh. 13 - What Are Clones? Cloning is a general term used...Ch. 13 - Prob. 2QPCh. 13 - Prob. 3QP
Ch. 13 - Prob. 4QPCh. 13 - Prob. 5QPCh. 13 - Prob. 6QPCh. 13 - Cloning Genes Is a Multistep Process The following...Ch. 13 - Prob. 8QPCh. 13 - Prob. 9QPCh. 13 - Cloning Genes Is a Multistep Process Which enzyme...Ch. 13 - Cloning Genes Is a Multistep Process In cloning...Ch. 13 - Prob. 12QPCh. 13 - Prob. 13QPCh. 13 - Prob. 14QPCh. 13 - Prob. 15QPCh. 13 - Cloned Libraries You are running a PCR to generate...Ch. 13 - Prob. 17QPCh. 13 - Prob. 18QPCh. 13 - Prob. 19QPCh. 13 - Analyzing Cloned Sequences A base change (A to T)...Ch. 13 - Prob. 21QPCh. 13 - Analyzing Cloned Sequences What kind of...Ch. 13 - Prob. 23QP
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- Explain why can a clone can be produced from a single body cell adult?arrow_forwardIn 1997, Dolly the sheep was cloned by a technique called somatic-cell nuclear transfer (or nuclear-transfer cloning). A nucleus from an adult mammary cell was transferred into an egg from which the nucleus had been removed. The egg was allowed to divide several times in culture, then the embryo was transferred to a surrogate mother who gave birth to Dolly. Dolly died in 2003 after mating and giving birth herself to viable offspring. What does the creation of Dolly tell us about the potential of nuclear material derived from a fully differentiated adult cell? Does the creation of Dolly tell us anything about the potential of an intact, fully differentiated adult cell?arrow_forwardDraw a basket mutant embryo. What does basket encode? Why do the mutant embryos have this phenotype?arrow_forward
- 8) You perform flow cytometry on a population of cells treated with a mutagen to identify new factors required for cell cycle progression. You isolate two new mutants that display a change in the rate of the cell cycle. You measure DNA content with flow cytometry from a control cell population as well as from these two mutants. The results from this experiment are shown below. Control Mutant 1 Mutant 2 1 Relative amount of DNA per cell Use these data to answer the following questions. 1) If you measured levels of M-cyclin protein from these different populations, which would have the HIGHEST. a. Control b. Mutant 1 c. Mutant 2 2) After genome sequencing, you identify a loss-of-function mutation in Cdc20 in one of these cell populations. Based on these data, which population would you expect to have this mutation? a. Mutant 1 b. Mutant 2 3) If DNA damage is sensed during replication and cell cycle progression is stopped, which of the graphs would you expect to observe? a. Control b.…arrow_forwarda. What is the purpose of molecular cloning?b. What purpose do selectable markers serve in vectors?c. What is the purpose of the origin of replication in aplasmid vector?d. Why do cloning vectors have polylinkers?arrow_forwardThe goal of most gene therapies is to insert a healthy copy of a gene into the genome. Besides CRISPR, techniques for integrating DNA into the genome do not target that DNA to a particular genomic location and thus different cells end up with the DNA sequence in different positions. A. It has been shown that where the healthy gene integrates is heavily influenced by chromatin. Why? B. The same gene integrated into different locations in the genome will be expressed differently. Why? C. Over time the expression of an integrated gene will change, usually decreasing. Describe how you think the cell downregulates expression of an integrated gene.arrow_forward
- #3) Ligase catalyzes a reaction between the 5' phosphate and the 3' hydroxyl groups at the end of DNA molecules. The enzyme calf intestinal phosphatase catalyzes the removal of the 5' phosphate from DNA molecules. What would be the consequence of treating a cloning vector, before ligation, with calf intestinal phosphatase?arrow_forwardWhen treating a person by gene therapy, is it necessary that the therapeutic gene becomes part of a chromosome (integration) when inserted into cells? Explain your answer.arrow_forwardUsing illustrations describe the structure of a typical cloning vector and discuss the functions of each element.arrow_forward
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