07.17.09

Benefits of Altered DNA

Part 1: Production of Insulin

As previously mentioned, there are many bene­fits of altering DNA by genetic engineering. Phar­­ma­ceutical companies pro­ducing human insulin (hu­malin) and hu­man growth hor­­mone (HGH) with bacteria with modified DNA were two of the earlier successes.

· Humalin: The introduction of genetically modified bac­teria to produce human in­su­lin replaced the use of cow and pig insulin. Although pig and cow in­sulin is very sim­i­lar to human DNA, some people produce antibodies that re­duce its effectiveness. Also, those who de­­vel­op these antibodies tend to have inflam­ma­tion at the point of injection. The introduction of humalin elim­inated these complications.

clip_image002[17]· HGH: HGH produced by the bacteria with modified DNA (called rHGH) re­placed HGH ex­tracted from cadavers (cada­ver-GH). In 1985, there were four cases of Creutzfeldt-Jakob (mad cow) disease diag­nosed in people who had been treated with cadaver-GH, lea­ding to the eventual global ban. Ge­nen­tech (USA) and Kabi (Swedish) had produced the first rHGH in 1981, leading to a sufficient sup­ply when cadaver-GH was banned.

· Insulin Production: To produce insulin using bacteria, a pro­cess called recom­bi­nant DNA is used togenetics  modify the DNA of the bacteria. The recombinant DNA pro­cess is a means of inserting new DNA into the existing DNA of an or­gan­ism. For insulin production, the DNA is altered by inserting the insulin gene extracted from human DNA in­­to a plas­mid in the bacteria. A plasmid is a strand of DNA, usually circular, separate from a bac­teria’s regular genome that rep­li­cates inde­pen­dently from the ge­nome DNA. The insu­lin gene is inserted in the plasmid rather than the ge­nome.

To pre­pare for pur­i­­fi­cation of the mod­i­fied bacteria, the gene that provides am­pi­cillin tolerance is also in­serted in a plasmid, along with the gene for luciferase, the protein that makes fireflies glow. The bacteria are then grown on a sub­­­strate containing ampi­cil­lin, so the sur­viving colonies that are ampicil­lin resistant glow in the dark are most likely to be the bac­teria with the altered DNA. This me­­thod of se­lec­tion is a purification step in the pro­cess.

Typically, the insulin is attached to the com­pound the bacteria normally excrete. In the fi­nal step an enzyme snips off the unwanted mole­cule and separates it from the desired compound.

The production of insulin using bacteria has been replaced by using genetically-engineered yeast. It was determined that it produces a form of insulin almost identical to human DNA. Neither the humalin from bacteria nor from yeast cause the side effects that animal insulin did.

Image Sources:

The Mummy (Boris Karloff ) as a cadaver: http://www.channel4.com/film/media/images/Channel4/film/M/mummy_the_xl_01–film-B.jpg

Recombinant DNA Process: http://publications.nigms.nih.gov/thenewgenetics/images/ch2_recombinant.gif

For more information, go to: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Recombinant_dna

http://www.littletree.com.au/dna.htm

http://www.discoveriesinmedicine.com/Hu-Mor/Insulin.html

http://www.scienceblog.com/cms/node/2580

http://www.isnare.com/?aid=373883&ca=Aging

Read about Monoclonal Antibodies in our next installment.

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