Biotechnology: Module - 5
Biotechnology: Module - 5
Emerging Areas
in Biology
30
Notes
BIOTECHNOLOGY
At home we prepare food items such as yoghurt (curd), cake, bread, idli and dosa
by the action of microorganisms, such as the bacteria and fungi. Brewers use yeast
(fungus) to make beer. Antibiotics such as penicillin are obtained from certain fungi.
Nowadays, biological processes such as fermentation by microorganisms is being
used in industry on a commercial scale for making food, drinks, drugs (medicines)
and industrial chemicals. Modern techniques in biotechnology are programming
microorganisms for this task. In this lesson, you will learn about use of microorganisms
in industries.
OBJECTIVES
After completing this lesson, you will be able to:
z appreciate the importance of biotechnology in human welfare;
z explain the use of biotechnology in industry;
z list the microbes used in the industry and the products manufactured through
their use;
z explain fermentation and outline the process of making alcohol by using
microorganisms;
z describe the process of making yoghurt and cheese on a large scale;
z explain the contribution of microorganisms in making antibiotics and vaccines;
z define genetic engineering and mention its utility;
z define transgenic organisms, mention the steps in their production and cite a
few examples of transgenic plants and animals;
z explain the process and importance of gene therapy;
z explain bioremediation and biopesticides.
BIOLOGY 293
MODULE - 5 Biotechnology
Emerging Areas
in Biology 30.1 BIOTECHNOLOGY
The word biotechnology has come from two words, bios (meaning biology) and
technology (meaning technological application). Thus biotechnology is defined as
the industrial application of living organisms and their biological processes
such as biochemistry, microbiology, and genetic engineering, in order to make
best use of the microorganisms for the benefit of mankind.
Notes Biotechnology is applied in many areas to produce foods and medicines, in the
development of new diagnostic tools, gene therapy, and DNA finger-printing for
forensic purposes.
2. Environment
Cleaning up and managing the environment : Cleaning up the environment using
living organisms is called bioremediation. Naturally occurring, as well as genetically
modified microorganisms, such as bacteria, fungi and enzymes are used to break
down toxic and hazardous substances present in the environment.
3. Agriculture
Biotechnology has also made possible the production of crops improved disease
resistan; herbicide-toleran and insecticide-resistan. Plants with improved nutritional
value for livestock have also been obtained through biotechnology.
Control of pests : One application of biotechnology is in the control of insect pests.
The genetic make-up of the pest is changed by causing some mutations. These pests
become sterile and do not reproduce further.
294 BIOLOGY
Biotechnology MODULE - 5
Emerging Areas
Manufacturing and bio-processing : With the help of new biological techniques in Biology
it has become possible to grow, the plants that produce compounds for use in
detergents, paints, lubricants and plastics on large scale.
Food and drinks : Biotechnology, has also made the processing of foods and their
products easier. Preservation and storing of food for consumption later has become
easy and cheap with the help of biotechnology. Seedless grapes and seedless citrus
fruits have been developed using biotechnology. Notes
4. Industry
Biotechnology has been used in the industry to produce new products for human
consumption. Food additives have been developed which help in the preservation
of food. Microorganisms are used in the mass production of items such as cheese,
yoghurt, and alcohol.
30.1.2 Industrial Microorganisms and Their Industrial Products
Important microorganisms used in industries include
z yeasts (fungi)
z moulds (fungi)
z bacteria
z filamentous bacteria (actinomycetes)
Microbes are used in the manufacture of several products. Some of these are
z alcohol-containing beverages z yoghurt (curd)
z proteins z antibiotics and monoclonal antibodies
z vitamins, steroids and enzymes z biogas
The progress in gene manipulation and genetic engineering has introduced
the use of cultured mammalian cells and ‘hybridomas’ in the industries.
Hybridomas are created by fusion of cells belonging to organisms of
different species.
BIOLOGY 295
MODULE - 5 Biotechnology
Emerging Areas
in Biology on a large scale for brewery and
bakery.
Bakers use yeast to leaven (raise) Grape pressing
dough to make bread. Yeast is also Elimination of
contaminants
grown on molasses and is packed and
sold. Yeast is used to raise cakes and Addition of desired
Sterilization organisms
Notes bread while baking. +
Alcoholic beverages are manufactured Yeast addition
by fermentation of sugars by the yeast,
Alcohol production
Saccharomyces cerevisiae. It is called Fermentation from sugars
Brewer’s yeast. The source of
carbohydrate fermented by yeast gives
the beverage its specific flavour. For Excess yeast
example :
– Wine is obtained by fermentation
of grapes. Grapes are fermented Setting vat Fermentation
by S. cerevisiae and its soluble
sugars (glucose and fructose) are
converted into CO2 and ethyl Excess yeast removal
alcohol.
– Fermentation is carried out in large Aging Development of final
wine bouquet
tanks called bioreactors.
– Barley malt is fermented to yield
beer.
Steps taken for fermentation Bottling
Notes
INTEXT QUESTIONS 30.1
1. Name three different kinds of microorganisms used in the manufacture of
industrial products.
................................................................................................................
2. Name three products obtained in industries by using microorganisms.
................................................................................................................
3. Name two alcohols produced through fermentation by yeast.
................................................................................................................
4. Name the two methods of inoculation of yeast in the medium.
................................................................................................................
5. Match the items given in columns A with those given in column B.
Column A Column B
1. Bioreactor (a) Butanol
2. Steaming under pressure (b) Fermentation tank
3. Alcohol (c) Autoclave
Drawbacks of antibiotics
Use of antibiotics was a big step in curing infectious diseases which offered a safe,
sure and relatively inexpensive cure. But even now we find many people suffering
from bacterial diseases. The reasons for this are:
1. Some people are allergic to a particular antibiotic.
2. Some disease causing bacteria undergo mutation and become resistant to a
particular antibiotic to which they were sensitive earlier.
Sources of antibiotics
Some of the common antibiotics and their source organisms are given in table
30.2.
298 BIOLOGY
Biotechnology MODULE - 5
Emerging Areas
Table 30.2 Major antibiotics and their sources in Biology
30.3 VACCINATION
In 1790, Edward Jenner observed that milkmaids did not get smallpox as they were
exposed to a milder disease cowpox. Jenner infected a boy with cowpox germs and
after two months with small pox germs. The boy did not get small pox. Jenner
proposed that if mild or attenuated (weakened) germs were introduced into the body,
they would not cause the disease. He gave the term vaccine (latin vacca : cow)
or vaccination, for the weakened germ and its protective inoculation.
Today, the principle of vaccination has been extended to prevent attack of many
diseases. When vaccines are made from attenuated disease causing bacteria, they
are termed as “first generation vaccines”. The “second generation vaccines” have
been produced by genetic engineering or recombinant DNA technology about which
you shall study in the next section. Second generation vaccines for Hepatitis B virus
and Herpes virus are already in use. Vaccines synthesised from chemicals are called
“third generation vaccines”.
30.4 PRODUCTION OF VITAMINS
Vitamins are nutrients required in very small amounts for essential metabolic
reactions in the body. They are produced using biotechnology. Vitamin C was the
first vitamin to be produced during a fermentation process by using bacteria. B12
or cyanocobalamin and B2 or Riboflavin were obtained from liver extract. The
production of B12 involved fermentation by propionic bacteria. In nature B2 is found
in cereals, vegetables and yeast but the yield of B2 can be enhanced hundred to three
hundred fold by using microbes.
30.5 PRODUCTION OF BIOGAS
Biogas is a new conventional source of fuel. Its use can save fossil fuel (coal,
kerosene, and petrol) which are fast getting depleted.
Biogas is made from organic waste including faecal matter. Cowdung or faeces have
lignocellulose. The energy used as fuel comes from methane (CH4). Cowdung forms
the primary source of biogas. In India cowdung is available in plenty in villages and
small scale methane generating plants have been designed.
BIOLOGY 299
MODULE - 5 Biotechnology
Emerging Areas
in Biology Any biodegradable substance (which can be decomposed by bacteria) can be
fermented anaerobically (in the absence of oxygen) by methane-producing
(methanogenic) bacteria. Cowdung or faeces are collected and put in a biogas
digester or fermenter ( a large vessel in which fermentation can take place). A series
of chemical reactions occur in the presence of methanogenic bacteria (CH4
generating bacteria) leading to the production of CH4 and CO2.
While generating biogas, few parameters have to be taken into account. These are
Notes
as follows:
1. Fermentation should be in an anaerobic environment and no free oxygen should
be present.
2. pH in the fermenter should be close to neutral, around 6.8 to 7.6
3. Methanogenic bacteria are to be used for fermentation.
Several kinds of reactors have been designed. One side of the reactor is for input,
that is, for introducing cowdung or faecal matter into the reactor. Whiel other side
of the reactor has an outlet for removal of biogas: The material is left behind is called
slurry. The gas gets stored above the slurry level. Slurry forms excellent manure.
Advantages of biogas
1. Biogas is a fuel used to cook food, and light lamps.
2. Slurry left after biogas production forms a soil conditioner (manure).
3. Biogas is much cheaper than LPG (Liquefied Petroleum Gas) which we
commonly use these days in our houses.
Restriction enzyme
makes cuts at specific
sites in all the chromosomes Fragments of
of an organism's cell chromosomal
DNA
Joining of
chromosomal Recombinant plasmids
Same restriction enzyme Cut plasmid containing the DNA
is used to cut plasmids
and plasmid
DNA DNA using fragments
Fig. 30.2 Steps in formation of multiple copies of recombinant DNA for DNA library
BIOLOGY 303
MODULE - 5 Biotechnology
Emerging Areas
in Biology 4. Where are plasmids found?
................................................................................................................
5. Why are restriction enzymes called “molecular scissors”?
................................................................................................................
6. Name the enzyme which joins DNA fragments.
................................................................................................................
Notes 7. What is a clonal vector?
................................................................................................................
8. What do you mean by transgenic organism?
................................................................................................................
304 BIOLOGY
Biotechnology MODULE - 5
Emerging Areas
2. Enzymes have also been produced from cloned genes. The following table 30.4 in Biology
gives the names of such enzymes and their uses:
Table 30.4 The names of enzymes and their uses
Enzymes Used in
Proteases manufacture of detergents, meat tenderisers.
Amylases manufacture of beer, bread and textiles
Glucoisomerases to make corn syrup, which is sweeter than sucrose Notes
and used to flavour soft drinks
Enzymes are fragile and have to be entrapped in gel and encapsulated in small
artificial cells.
3. Antibiotics
Since the discovery of Penicillin in 1920s, more than 6000 antibiotics have been
isolated from various microorganisms and have resulted in an enormous improvement
in human health. Research is in progress to genetically engineer biosynthetic
pathways for the synthesis of antibiotics. Novel antibiotics have also been obtained
through genetic manipulation.
4. Vaccines
Bioengineered vaccines have been developed for rabies and hepatitis B. A gene for
the antigen protein is inserted into a plasmid and the bacteria containing recombinant
DNA then generate large quantities of the protein. The protein is added to the
vaccine. Antibodies immediately form against the antigen when vaccinated.
BIOLOGY 305
MODULE - 5 Biotechnology
Emerging Areas
in Biology 1. Usefulness of transgenic organisms
1. For a better yield desirable traits can be introduced or increased in agricultural
plants and domestic animals, especially the cattle.
2. Valuable products can be produced by transgenic plants and animals.
3. Transgenic plants and animals can be used for investigating biological processes
such as gene expression.
Notes
2. Methodology for production of transgenics
There are two methods which are mostly used for generating transgenics:
(i) Microinjection of foreign DNA into pronuclei of fertilised eggs.
(ii) Retroviral vector method. Infection of pre-implantation embryos with
retroviruses carrying foreign DNA.
The first method has the following steps:
(i) Collection of oocytes from the animal killed in slaughter house or surgically
removed from female parent.
(ii) In-vitro maturation of oocytes.
(iii) In-vitro fertilisation with male semen.
(iv) Eggs (oocytes) to be centrifuged to concentrate yolk which in normal cells
prevents male pronuclei from being seen under the dissecting microscope.
(v) Microinjection of “input DNA” into male pronuclei (Fig. 30.3). Usually
hundred to thousand copies of the gene of interest are injected.
(vi) In-vitro development of embryos.
(vii) Non-surgical implantation of one embryo into a recepient foster mother.
(viii) Screening of DNA of the offspring of foster mother for presence of transgenes.
(ix) Offspring with the transgenes are the transgenic organisms.
By recombinant DNA techniques, plant breeders can now directly modify the DNA
of plants. They can add genes from other species to the plant. The most popular
method for doing this is to produce a transgenic plant by the use of Agrobacterium
tumefaciens. It is a soil bacterium which has a natural “genetic engineering” system.
It has a plasmid which can be inserted into plant cells. Agrobacterium tumefaciens
causes galls (tumours) (Fig. 30.4) in several plants. The information for production Notes
of galls is present on a plasmid, (Ti) in the bacterium. A segment of DNA from the
plasmid can be transferred into plant cell. In the Ti plasmid, gall forming genes can
be removed and substituted by desired genes. The plasmid can then be used to
transform plant cells. Such foreign genes in the chromosomes of transformed plant
cells can be expressed normally (Fig. 30.4).
BIOLOGY 307
MODULE - 5 Biotechnology
Emerging Areas
in Biology Transgenic animals
Mice : It is difficult to generate transgenic animals as animal cells do not accept
plasmids. Transgenic mice are, however, routinely produced in the laboratories
throughout the world by microinjecting foreign DNA. Gene for growth hormone
from rats was microinjected into mouse eggs. These mice grew larger than their
litter mates. This was because rat gene got integrated into mouse DNA and was
Notes being expressed. (Fig. 30.5).
BIOLOGY 309
MODULE - 5 Biotechnology
Emerging Areas
in Biology Normal gene functioning
310 BIOLOGY
Biotechnology MODULE - 5
Emerging Areas
manipulate them to remove the genetic disorder. Such treatment is called Gene in Biology
Therapy.
Gene Therapy thus may be defined as a technique in which a patient (sufferer) is
given healthy genes to replace the defective ones inherited from the parents, or to
enhance the action/reaction of the genes they already have.
Replacement and alteration of defective gene is called
Gene therapy. Notes
Human gene therapy in a broad sense is the addition of functional normal gene or
genes to the genetic material contained in the human cell. This is with the aim of
correcting an inherited defect.
The ultimate goal is to let ‘protein assembling unit’ of the cell make desired proteins
needed for the normal functioning of an individual. It is like supplying a patient with
the necessary gene product formed within the cells by the patient’s own body.
Once a normal gene has been cloned, it can be used to correct a genetic defect.
Body cells are targeted for genetic transformation (defective gene transformed to
normal). This approach helps in the correction of a genetic defect confined to a
specific organ or tissue.
BIOLOGY 311
MODULE - 5 Biotechnology
Emerging Areas
in Biology (ii) Germ line (sex cell) gene therapy
In this approach, cells of germinal epithelium or gametes or zygote are genetically
modified to create an individual that will carry remedial gene(s) in the following
generation. Presently all research on human gene therapy is directed towards
correcting gene defects in somatic cells (non-sex cells). Somatic gene therapy can
be grouped under the broad categories of :
Notes (a) Ex-vivo gene therapy,
(b) In-vivo gene therapy, and
(c) Antisense gene therapy.
(a) Ex-vivo (outside the body) gene therapy:
This type of therapy usually involves the use of cells (with defective gene) taken
from the patient. After the gene alteration when the same cells are transfused
(transferred back), no immunological response takes place. The steps involved in
the procedure are :
1. Isolating the cells with gene defects from a patient.
2. Growing the isolated cells in culture.
3. Altering the genome of the isolated cells with remedial gene.
4. Selecting, growing and testing the altered cells.
5. Transplanting or transfusing the altered cells back into the patient (Fig. 30.6).
312 BIOLOGY
Biotechnology MODULE - 5
Emerging Areas
cells can divide and differentiate into various important cells such as B cells and in Biology
T cells, macrophages, red blood cells, platelets and bone cells.
Genetically engineered stem cells on transplanting back into the patient’s body result
in a continuous supply of the required gene product. The technique can be used
in the treatment of the following genetic disorders:
(i) Severe Combined Immuno Deficiency (SCID).
(ii) Sickle cell anaemia. Notes
(iii) Thalassaemia
(iv) Certain tumours.
(b) In-vivo (within the body) gene therapy
This type of gene therapy includes direct delivery of a remedial gene into the cells
of a particular tissue of the patient. Adenovirus, a double stranded DNA virus, is
being used as a vehicle for transferring the remedial gene, (Fig. 30.7). The viruses
used are weak enough to cause any disease. The tissue specific virus integrates with
the host genome and can only infect dividing cells and not the other healthy cells.
This therapy may become useful in the treatment of cancer, Alzheimer’s disease and
Parkinsons’s disease.
BIOLOGY 313
MODULE - 5 Biotechnology
Emerging Areas
in Biology This therapy involves the introduction of nucleic acid sequence that is complementary
to all or part of m-RNA (messenger RNA formed in the target cell) into the cells
overproducing the gene product (Fig. 30.8). This therapy will prove useful in certain
human genetic diseases and cancers where too much of a gene product or its
continuous presence changes the normal functioning of the cell. It has been tried
for treatment of malignant glioma or brain tumour. Tlaur-save tomato with a long
shelp life has been produced by this technique.
Notes
314 BIOLOGY
Biotechnology MODULE - 5
Emerging Areas
consequences in the offspring. Gene therapy is thus not only risky but an expensive in Biology
and time consuming technique available only in few advanced countries.
Gene therapy has the following limitations
(i) Research is limited to only somatic cells. Treated individuals can not pass the
genetic improvement to offspring.
(ii) There could be a possibility of random integration of DNA into a human
chromosome leading to inactivation or activation of a normal gene. This may Notes
result in either deficiency of an important enzyme or uncontrolled cell division
leading to cancerous growth.
(iii) The Procedure Planned has to meet strict safety standards in animal trials.
(iv) Target diseases have to be limited to those that involve known defects in a
single gene, and the normal gene must be cloned and be available for transplant.
316 BIOLOGY
Biotechnology MODULE - 5
Emerging Areas
z There are three main therapeutic approaches to gene therapy : (a) ex-vivo gene in Biology
therapy, (b) in-vivo gene therapy, and (c) antisense gene therapy.
z Ex-vivo gene therapy includes addition of corrected genes through retroviral
cloning vectors.
z In-vivo gene therapy includes direct delivery of corrected genes into the tissues
by use of adenovirus.
z Antisense therapy is designed to prevent or lower the expression of gene in order Notes
to have less accumulation of a gene product.
z Gene therapy has certain limitations such as (i) somatic cell gene therapy can
not rectify the defect in subsequent generation, (ii) random integration of DNA
from outside may interfere with normal gene, (iii) strict safety standards are to
be maintained, (iv) proper clones of requisite genes have to be available.
TERMINAL EXERCISES
1. Define biotechnology.
2. How are alcoholic beverages produced by fermentation? Mention the steps in
the process.
3. How can you make cheese and curd on a large scale?
4. What are antibiotics? Name five antibiotics and their sources.
5. How are different generations of vaccines produced?
6. Describe the steps in the production of biogas and mention the precautions
to be taken.
7. Enumerate in a sequence the steps in recombinant DNA technology.
8. Describe the uses of genetic engineering.
9. How can a transgenic animal be obtained?
10. Write a note on bioremediation.
11. Define the term gene therapy. Under what condition does it become necessary
to opt for such a therapy ?
12. What is meant by human somatic gene therapy? How does it differ from the
germ line gene therapy? Which of the two have been successful so far and why?
13. Discuss in brief the different types of somatic gene therapy.
318 BIOLOGY