Biotechnology & Its Applications is a branch of biology that uses living organisms, cells, or biological systems to develop useful products and solve real-world problems in agriculture, medicine, and industry.
It focuses on improving crop production, treating genetic disorders, and developing modern diagnostic tools. In agriculture, biotechnology helps create genetically modified crops like BT Cotton that are resistant to pests and improve yield and nutrition. In medicine, it is used to produce human insulin (Humulin), develop gene therapy for genetic diseases like ADA deficiency, and detect diseases early using techniques such as PCR and ELISA.
Overview of Topics in Biotechnology Applications
Main topics covered include:
Major Applications of Biotechnology
Biotechnology applications are primarily seen in:
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Agriculture: Use of genetically modified crops.
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Medicine:
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Bio-pharmaceutics: Creation of drugs (e.g., genetically modified insulin, vaccines).
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Bio-therapeutics: Disease treatment (e.g., gene therapy).
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Diagnosis: Techniques like PCR and ELISA.
Additional broader applications include Waste Treatment (bioremediation) and Energy Production (biogas).
Three Critical Research Areas in Biotechnology
Biotechnology at a large scale depends not only on ideas but also on how efficiently those ideas are converted into usable products. According to NCERT, there are three important research areas that determine how successful any biotechnological process will be.
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Finding the Best Catalyst: Identifying efficient organisms or enzymes.
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Creating Optimum Conditions: Establishing the best environmental conditions for the catalyst.
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Downstream Processing: Efficient separation and purification of the desired product. This is a very important research area.
Biotechnology Applications in Agriculture
The goal is to increase food production. Three main approaches are:
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Agro-chemical Based Agriculture: Uses harmful chemicals like fertilizers and pesticides.
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Organic Farming: Utilizes bio-fertilizers and bio-pesticides.
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Use of Genetically Modified Crops (GMC): Modifies crop genes to enhance properties.
Green Revolution
The Green Revolution significantly increased food production, led by Norman E. Borlaug globally and M.S. Swaminathan in India. It tripled food production but was still not enough to meet demand. Increased food production resulted from better management practices, use of fertilizers and pesticides, and better crop varieties.
Advantages of Genetically Modified Crops (GMCs)
Genetically Modified Crops are developed by altering the genetic makeup of plants to improve their performance, productivity, and resistance to environmental challenges. These crops help address major agricultural problems like low yield, pest attacks, and poor soil conditions.
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Increased Tolerance to Abiotic Stresses: Tolerate extreme temperatures, pH levels, and salinity.
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Enhanced Productivity/Yield: Designed for higher yields.
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Reduced Reliance on Pesticides and Fertilizers: Plants can be naturally resistant to pests (e.g., BT Cotton) and utilize nutrients better.
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Increased Mineral Usage from Soil: Utilize minerals more efficiently.
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Reduced Post-Harvest Losses: Engineered to reduce spoilage (e.g., Flavr Savr Tomato used gene silencing to prevent over-ripening by silencing the Polygalacturonase gene).
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Enhanced Nutritional Value: Have higher nutritional content (e.g., Golden Rice, a Vitamin A-enriched rice, created by inserting a beta-carotene gene from Daffodil using Agrobacterium tumefaciens).
BT Cotton
BT Cotton is a pest-resistant genetically modified plant designed to combat Cotton Bollworms. The “BT” refers to Bacillus thuringiensis, a bacterium that produces insecticidal Cry proteins.
Mechanism of Action:
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Inside Bacillus thuringiensis: Contains Cry genes producing inactive Cry proteins (protoxins).
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Genetic Modification of Cotton: The Cry gene is isolated and inserted into the cotton plant’s genome using the Ti plasmid of Agrobacterium tumefaciens.
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Effect on Bollworms: When a bollworm eats BT Cotton, the inactive Cry protein is activated in the insect’s alkaline pH midgut. This active toxin creates pores in midgut cells, causing them to swell and burst, leading to insect death.
Important Points for Exams:
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Cry Gene Selection: Specific Cry genes target specific pests.
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Specific Cry Genes and Their Targets: Cry1AB for Corn Borer; Cry2AB and Cry1Ac for Cotton Bollworm.
Gene Silencing / mRNA Silencing / RNA Interference (RNAi)
Gene silencing, also called mRNA silencing or RNA interference (RNAi), is a natural biological process in which the expression of a specific gene is blocked so that no protein is produced from it.
I. RNA Interference (RNAi) / Gene Silencing
RNA interference (RNAi) or gene silencing prevents protein formation by silencing its mRNA. This is achieved by making the mRNA double-stranded, rendering it untranslatable. RNAi occurs in all eukaryotes as a natural cellular defense against harmful RNAs (e.g., from RNA viruses or transposons).
II. Application of RNAi: Pest Resistance in Tobacco Plants
RNA interference makes tobacco plants pest-resistant against the nematode, Meloidogyne incognitia, which causes root-knot disease. Nematodes require specific proteins for feeding.
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Strategy: Nematode-specific genes are introduced into tobacco plants via Agrobacterium tumefaciens. These genes produce both sense and antisense mRNA within the plant, forming double-stranded RNA (dsRNA).
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Mechanism: When the nematode feeds on the plant, the plant-derived dsRNA (processed into siRNA by Dicer and then by RISC) enters the nematode. This dsRNA is complementary to the nematode’s own essential sense mRNA, causing it to be cleaved/destroyed. Without essential proteins, the nematode cannot feed and dies.
Transgenic Animals
Transgenic animals are those with a manipulated genome by modifying or introducing a foreign gene. 95% of transgenic animals are mice due to chromosomal similarity to humans, ease of handling, and short life cycle.
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Study of Normal Growth, Development, and Physiology: To understand gene expression and physiological roles.
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Study of Diseases (Disease Models): For understanding diseases like Cystic Fibrosis, Cancer, Alzheimer’s, Rheumatoid Arthritis.
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Chemical Safety Testing: To test drug safety before human trials.
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Vaccine Safety Testing: To test vaccine safety. Mice are now used for polio vaccine testing, replacing monkeys, which were costly and raised ethical concerns.
