History of Biotechnology
History of Biotechnology
History of Biotechnology
Genetics
Presented by:
Chairany Rizka ( 4103342001 )
Era ( 4103342012 )
Nanda Eska Anugrah Nasution
( 4103342014 )
I. What is Biotechnology?
Biotechnology = bios (life) + logos (study of or
essence)
Literally the study of tools from living things
Examples
Examples:
they could plant their own crops and breed their
own animals, they learned to use biotechnology.
The first animal breeders, realizing that different
physical traits could be either magnified or lost
by mating appropriate pairs of animals, engaged
in the manipulations of biotechnology.
Ancient Biotechnology
* Domestication and Agriculture
* Ancient Plant Germplasm
* History of Fermented Foods and
Beverages
(the beginning of Classical Biotechnology)
Domestication
Nomadic lifestyle of prehistoric peoples
Domestication
9000 BC - First evidence of plant domestication
in hills above Tigris River
5000 BC - Agricultural communities exist in
Mesopotamia
2000 BC - The Babylonians and Egyptians left
pictorial evidence that dogs, sheep, and cattle had
been domesticated
Fermented Foods
Once people settled in villages, the development of new foods was
possible - accidental discovery!
* food contamination often destroys the food reserve
* in some cases the microbial activity enhances the flavor
and texture kimchi - sauerkraut - yoghurt - cheese
Biotechnology is
used for the first
time
when the Egyptians
use yeast to
leaven
bread and ferment
beer
4000 BC Cheese
According to an ancient legend, it was made
accidentally by an Arabian merchant who put his
supply of milk into a pouch made from a sheep's
stomach, as he set out on a day's journey across the
desert.
The rennet in the lining of the pouch, combined with
the heat of the sun, caused the milk to separate into
curd and whey. That night he found that the whey
satisfied his thirst, and the cheese (curd) had a
delightful flavor which satisfied his hunger
Classical Biotechnology
Knowledge drives technology
scientific and applied knowledge
practical experience
* From mid-nineteenth century
knowledge of cell processes
- refined fermentation technology
Brewers began producing alcohol on a large scale in the early 1700s
* By the 1800s brewers knew to use pure yeast cultures
Classical Biotechnology
1822-1895
Antibiotics
Penicillin
Developed in the late1920s
Introduced in the 1940s
First drug produced
by
microbes
Classical Biotechnology
- Penicillin was produced by the fermentation of cultured Penicillium.
Modern Biotech
Deals with manipulating genetic
info
Microscopy and advanced
computer technology are used
In-depth knowledge of science
Genetics
Study of heredity
Most work has focused on
animal and plant genetics
Genes determiners of heredity
Genes
Carry the genetic code
Understanding genetic structure
essential for genetic
engineering
Heredity
How traits are passed from
parents to offspring
Members of the same species
pass the characteristics of that
species
Heredity
Differences exist within each
species.
Differences are known as
variability
Modern Biotech
Use of biotech to produce new
life forms
Emerged in mid 1900s
Made possible by rDNA
technology
1590-1675
Cells Discovered
1928
Penicillin Discovered by
Alexander Flemming
1953
Watson & Cricks Double Helix
1982
1st Biotech Drug Approved=
Human Insulin from GM
Bacteria
1996-7
1st weed & insect resistant crops for sale
Hello Dolly! 1st cloned animal in Scotland
By Ian wilmut
Dampak Positif
meningkatnya sifat resistensi tanaman terhadap hama dan penyakit
tanaman, misalnya tanaman transgenik kebal hama
meningkatnya produk-produk ( baik kualitas maupun kuantitas )
pertanian , perkebunan, peternakan maupun perikanan.
meningkatnya nilai tambah bahan makanan. Pengolahan bahan
makanan tertentu, seperti susu menjadi yoghurt, mentega, keju.
membantu manusia mengatasi masalah-masalah pencemaran
lingkungan, Seperti : bacteri pemakan plastik dan parafin, bacteri
penghasil bahan plastik biodegradable
Dampak Negatif
munculnya pencemaran biologis, berupa penyebaran organisme
transgenik yang tak terkendali.
gangguan keseimbangan ekosistem akibat perubahan dinamika
populasi.
kerusakan tatanan sosial masyarakat , ketika cloning pada
manusia tidak terkendali.
tersingkirnya berbagai plasma nutfah alami / lokal. Flora dan
fauna lokal "terdesak" oleh kehadiran flora dan fauna transgenik.
menimbulkan pertentangan berkepanjangan antara tokoh
ilmuwan bioteknologi dengan tokoh-tokoh kemanusiaan dan
agama.
Thank you
History of Genetic
Basic
Genetics is the study of genes.
Inheritance is how traits, or
characteristics, are passed on from
generation to generation.
Chromosomes are made up of genes,
which are made up of DNA.
Genetic material (genes,chromosomes,
DNA) is found inside the nucleus of a
cell.
Gregor Mendel is considered The
Father of Genetics"
Pre-Mendelian ideas on
Heredity
Ancient Theories
The most influential early theories of heredity
were that of Hippocrates and Aristotle.
Hippocrates' theory (possibly based on the
teachings of Anaxagoras) was similar to
Darwin's later ideas on pangenesis,
involving heredity material that collects
from throughout the body. Aristotle
suggested instead that the (nonphysical)
form-giving principle of an organism was
transmitted through semen and the
mother's menstrual blood, which interacted
in the womb to direct an organism's early
development.
Aristotle
Hippocrates
900 C
In the 9th century C
the Afro-Arab writer
Al-Jahiz considered
the effects of the
environment on the
likelihood of an
animal to survive.
1000 C
In 1000 CE, the Arab
physician, Abu al-Qasim
al-Zahrawi (known as
Albucasis in the West)
was the first physician to
describe clearly the
hereditary nature of
haemophilia in his AlTasrif.
1140 C
In 1140 CE, Judah
HaLevi described
dominant and
recessive genetic
traits in The Kuzari
1800 C
The Ideas about heredity
began to appear. Linnaeus
and others (among them
Joseph Gottlieb Klreuter, Carl
Friedrich von Grtner, and
Charles Naudin) conducted
extensive experiments with
hybridization, especially
species hybrids. Species
hybridizers described a wide
variety of inheritance
phenomena, include hybrid
sterility and the high
variability of back-crosses.
Early timeline
Gregor Mendel
Austrian Monk.
Experimented with pea plants.
Used pea plants because:
They were available
They reproduced quickly
They showed obvious differences in the
traits
Mendel cont
1869 C
Friedrich Miescher
discovers a weak
acid in the nuclei
of white blood
cells that today
we call DNA
1880-1890
Walther Flemming,
Eduard
Strasburger, and
Edouard Van
Beneden elucidate
chromosome
distribution during
cell division
1889
Hugo de Vries
postulates that
"inheritance of
specific traits in
organisms comes in
particles", naming
such particles
"(pan)genes
1900 C
Plant breeders were also
developing an array of stable
varieties in many important
plant species. In the early 19th
century, Augustin Sageret
established the concept of
dominance, recognizing that
when some plant varieties are
crossed, certain characters
(present in one parent) usually
appear in the offspring; he also
found that some ancestral
characters found in neither
parent may appear in
offspring.
1903
Walter Sutton and
Theodor Boveri
hypothesizes that
chromosomes, which
segregate in a
Mendelian fashion, are
hereditary units; see
the chromosome
theory
1905, 1908
1905: William
Bateson coins the
term "genetics" in
a letter to Adam
Sedgwick and at a
meeting in 1906
1908: Hardy
Weinberg law
derived.
1910
1910: Thomas Hunt
Morgan shows that
genes reside on
chromosomes
1913
Alfred Sturtevant
makes the first
genetic map of a
chromosome
Gene maps show
chromosomes
containing linear
arranged genes
1918
Ronald Fisher publishes
"The Correlation
Between Relatives on
the Supposition of
Mendelian Inheritance"
the modern synthesis
of genetics and
evolutionary biology
starts.
1920
Lysenkoism Started, during
Lysenkoism they stated that the
hereditary factor are not only in the
nucleus, but also in the cytoplasm,
though they called it living
protoplasm.
1928
Frederick Griffith
discovers that
hereditary material
from dead bacteria
can be incorporated
into live bacteria
(see Griffith's
experiment)
1931
Crossing over is
identified as the cause
of recombination; the
first cytological
demonstration of this
crossing over was
performed by Barbara
McClintock and Harriet
Creighton
1933
Jean Brachet is able
to show that DNA is
found in
chromosomes and
that RNA is present
in the cytoplasm of
all cells.
1941
1941: Edward Lawrie
Tatum and George
Wells Beadle show
that genes code for
proteins
1944
The AveryMacLeod
McCarty experiment
isolates DNA as the
genetic material (at
that time called
transforming principle
1947
Salvador Luria
discovers reactivation
of irradiated phage,
stimulating numerous
further studies of
DNA repair processes
in bacteriophage, and
other organisms,
including humans
1948
1948: Barbara
McClintock
discovers
transposons in
maize
1950
Erwin Chargaff shows
that the four nucleotides
are not present in
nucleic acids in stable
proportions, but that
some general rules
appear to hold (e.g.,
that the amount of
adenine, A, tends to be
equal to that of
thymine, T).
1952
The Hershey
Chase
experiment
proves the
genetic
information of
phages (and, by
implication, all
other organisms)
to be DNA
1953
DNA structure is resolved to be a
double helix by James Watson and
Francis
Crick
Watson and
Crick admiring their tin and wire model of DNA
1956
1956: Joe Hin Tjio,
while working in
Albert Levan's lab,
established the
correct chromosome
number in humans
to be 46
1958
The Meselson
Stahl experiment
demonstrates that
DNA is
semiconservativel
y replicated.
1960
Jacob and
collaborators
discover the
operon, a group of
genes whose
expression is
coordinated by an
operator
1961-1967
Combined efforts of
scientists "crack"
the genetic code,
including Marshall
Nirenberg, Har
Gobind Khorana,
Sydney Brenner &
Francis Crick.
1964
Howard Temin
showed using RNA
viruses that the
direction of DNA to
RNA transcription
can be reversed
1970
Restriction enzymes
were discovered in
studies of a bacterium,
Haemophilus
influenzae, enabling
scientists to cut and
paste DNA
1972
Walter Fiers and his
team at the
Laboratory of
Molecular Biology of
the University of
Ghent (Ghent,
Belgium) were the
first to determine the
sequence of a gene:
the gene for
bacteriophage MS2
coat protein.
1976
Walter Fiers and his
team determine the
complete
nucleotidesequence of
bacteriophage MS2RNA
1977
DNA is sequenced for
the first time by Fred
Sanger, Walter
Gilbert, and Allan
Maxam working
independently.
Sanger's lab sequence
the entire genome of
bacteriophage -X174
1983
Kary Banks Mullis
invents the
polymerase chain
reaction enabling
the easy
amplification of
DNA
1989
The human gene that encodes the
CFTR protein was sequenced by
Francis Collins and Lap-Chee Tsui.
Defects in this gene cause cystic
fibrosis
1995
The genome of
bacterium
Haemophilus
influenzae is the first
genome of a free
living organism to be
sequenced
1996
Saccharomyces
cerevisiae, a
yeast species, is
the first
eukaryote
genome
sequence to be
released
1998
The first genome
sequence for a
multicellular
eukaryote,
Caenorhabditis
elegans, is
released
2001
First draft
sequences of the
human genome
are released
simultaneously
by the Human
Genome Project
and Celera
Genomics.
Aplied Science :
Medical Genetic
Breeding genetic
Genetic engineering
1940s Barbara
McClintock
describes
mobile genetic
elements in
maize
1944 Oswald
Avery shows
in bacteria
that nucleic
acids are the
transforming
principle
1953 James Watson
and Francis Crick
publish the double helix
model for DNAs
chemical structure
1958 Crick proposes
the central dogma for
biological information
flow: that DNA makes
RNA makes protein