Gene Colan

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    Human gene therapy is a procedure that is currently being used to help fight diseases with no known cures. Gene testing removes a gene that causes a disease and replaces it with a healthy copy of that gene. By placing a healthy copy of the gene inside the patient’s body, that gene can help fight any diseases, such as different forms of cancer, inherited disorders, immune system discords or viral infections (AIDS). Once inside the cell, the genes produce what the patient lacks, it kills the diseased

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    because of their small body size, their fertilization cycle, and genetically close relationship to human genome. To unravel the function of disease-related genes and to understand the mechanism of disease progression, mouse mutants were generated by pronuclear microinjection of TALEN mRNA targeted to the mouse homologs of human disease genes into one-cell embryos to generate novel Knockout and Knockin mutants. Frontotemporal lobar degeneration (FTLD) is a common cause of presenile dementia caused

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    INTRODUCTION: Genetic Engineering is a process where an organism’s genetic material is altered by introducing a new DNA. It is where a gene is artificially removed from one organism and transmitted into another using biotechnology. Its goal is to provide with one or more traits that are not found in recipient organism, giving it the ability to perform a certain action, which the organism in nature cannot. DNA and proteins are very important aspects in order to understand genetic engineering. DNA

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    through our parents’ genes. In human, there are 23 pairs of chromosomes (22 autosomal pairs and 1 pair of sex chromosomes), our chromosomes are organized into short segments of DNA called genes, and these genes make up our chromosomes. Our chromosomes can tell us if we have a disease or not, certain disease appear in certain chromosomes that help us determine what type of genetic disease the disease is. Variations of our genes are called alleles, having 2 alleles for each gene. When we use alleles

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    GATTACA In class, we watched the movie GATTACA. There were several ways in which this movie related to what we are learning and discussing in class. This movie was able to make everything more clear as it showed and explained concepts in more description. This movie seemed very futuristic and science fiction to me but the key concepts dealing with DNA and pregnancies are reality. When Jerome’s parents visited a genetics center for a second child, the geneticist stated that he took the liberty

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    The Human Genome Project

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    Once the decoding of the genome takes place, scientists will be able to develop individual treatment plans and understand a number of diseases. Research has found that there are over 3 billion amino acid base pairs which make-up 20,000 genes. Of these 20,000 genes, the human genetic code is defined by forty-six tightly packed bunches called chromosomes. Due to the vast array of amino acid base pairs, the project has taken over ten years to complete the sequencing of the specific parts, but the task

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    Genetics and Human Sexuality

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    homosexuality seems to have an epigenetic, not a genetic link. Epigenetic is the study of heritable changes in gene activity that are not caused by changes in the DNA sequence or genotypes, but rather phenotypes. Homosexual attraction has been said to be passed along in families, there is no proof of that, but leading researchers presume a genetic underpinning of sexual preference is lurking. While genes hold the instructions in the DNA, epi-marks direct how those instructions are carried out. The act of

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    I Love Going Gay !

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    development of varying sexual orientations in humans lies in our genes. This paper will give a brief introduction of genetics, and explain the impact genes have on the development of sexual orientation proven by genome studies, the fertile female hypothesis, twin studies, and the threshold model. Before dissecting the relationship of genetics and homosexuality it will be helpful to give a basic background of genetics. Genetics is the study of genes and variation in

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    In today’s modern society, there are over 10,000 diseases that are said to be monogenic, meaning that only one gene is involved in the disease ("Genes and Human Disease"). Many of these diseases are incurable and can prove to be terminal, one of which is Huntington’s disease. Not only is this disease physically detrimental to the well-being of the individual, it can also affect other loved ones such as offspring. An example of such issues is exemplified in Alice Wexler’s memoir Mapping Fate: A Memoir

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    have the ability to turn genes on or off. Finding the exact reason for why some genes are turned on or off is still being studied. Scientists are beginning to see that much of the reason there is such great diversity among species, ones that are similar and those that are completely different, lies in what happens during the growth of the embryo. By studying the Galapagos finch eggs Cliff Tabin was able to view the growth of the finch beaks and see that the exact same gene is responsible for the beak

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