Dobrodošli, Gost. Molim vas prijavite se ili se registrujte.
Da niste izgubili svoj aktivacioni e-mail?
Oreska - Užice
Užice na Internetu
Prijavite se sa korisničkim imenom, lozinkom i dužinom sesije
 
ARHIVA
   Početna   Pomoć Pravila Pretraga Gallery Prijavljivanje Registracija  
IZBORI: NAJFORUMAŠ I NAJFORUMAŠICA GODINE
AKCIJA: SVI UŽIČANI NA JEDNOM MESTU!
Za užičke nekomercijalne organizacije i ustanove besplatno...
Stranice: [1]
  Štampaj  
Autor Tema: Ljudski gen kravama...  (Pročitano 2598 puta)
VBO
Gost
« poslato: 02.10.2002. 17:59:43 »

Ne znam koliko vas vase TV obavestavaju o ovakvim stvarima ali danas ovde javilO da je na NZ odobren prvi eksperiment u kome ce se ( ne uzmite mi za zlo skroz slobodan "prevod" ) putem tog genetskog inzenjeringa kravama ugradjivati neki ljudski gen tako da ce se od ovih genetski modifikovanih krava dobijati mleko koje ce biti u stanju da LECI odredjene bolesti...( zaboravih koje :oops: ).
Kuda idu "divlje svinje"...pitam se...
Toliko da ne ostanete neobavesteni :mrgreen:
Sačuvana
Boban
Gost
« Odgovor #1 poslato: 03.10.2002. 15:27:32 »

Pravo da ti kazem, mene bi vise zabrinulo da se ljudima "ubrizgavaju" geni krava...

Mada... kad bolje razmislim, mozda se u tome krije prava tajna sto je Novi Zeland dovukao toliko stranaca iz primitivnih zemalja; imaju bre svet u malom, mogu da sprovedu vrlo validne eksperimente na izolovanom prostoru a da prakticno obuhvate sve postojece tipove ljudi...
Sačuvana
VBO
Gost
...
« Odgovor #2 poslato: 05.10.2002. 19:18:43 »

Ne pises ti dzabe naucnu fantastiku :mrgreen:  :wink:
Sačuvana
JLZ
Gost
« Odgovor #3 poslato: 22.10.2002. 23:19:14 »

- svinjo!
- da, draga.

Citat
Tuesday, October 22, 2002
 
WASHINGTON  — By manipulating swine sperm, Italian researchers have made a strain of pigs that carry human genes in their hearts, livers and kidneys, an advance that could lead to creating herds of pigs that could provide organs for transplanting into humans.

 
 
 
 
In a study appearing Tuesday in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, researchers at the University of Milan report they mixed swine sperm with human DNA to transfer a gene called decay accelerating factor, or DAF. The modified sperm was then used to fertilize pig eggs and produce litters of pigs carrying the human gene.

"What we obtain at high efficiency and low cost is genetically modified pigs expressing the human protein," said Dr. Marialuisa Lavitrano, a University of Milan researcher and first author of the study.

Lavitrano said 205 piglets in 20 litters were produced using the modified sperm technique and the human genes were present in 20 percent to 50 percent of the young. Tests showed that the human genes were present in the animals' central organs and that the human genes would be passed along to later generations of pigs.

Organs from the test animals are not ready for transplantation into humans because there are still pig genes that would cause the organs to be quickly rejected, Lavitrano said. But she added that the technique shows that by adding human genes to pig sperm it is possible to develop animals with organs that will not be rejected by the human immune system.

"They could be the starting point for new transgenesis (gene transfer) experiments," she said.

Lavitrano said five to seven other pig genes will need to be silenced or replaced by human genes before useful organs could be harvested from the animals.

"With our efficiency we think we can add the other genes and breed the animals in about two years," she said.

Medical scientists have been working to change swine genes so that modified animals could be used to make organs that would be tolerated by the human body. The goal is to create a special strain of pigs that could make organs that could be used to replace ailing livers, kidneys and hearts in humans. It's hoped that the use of pig organs would relieve the shortage of human organs available for transplant. It has been estimated that about 4,000 people die each year while awaiting donor organs.

For this xenotransplantation to work, the organs would have to be tolerated by the human immune system. Otherwise, the transplanted organs would be destroyed by the immune system within a short time.

Other researchers, using another technique, have eliminated one of two genes that make a sugar called alpha-1-galactose. This gene prompts an acute rejection by the human immune system. The researchers now are attempting to remove a second sugar gene that also causes rejection.

Dr. Randall S. Prather, a pig reproduction physiologist at the University of Missouri and a researcher who helped eliminate the alpha-1-galactose gene in one strain of pigs, said the Lavitrano study is an advance because it demonstrates a simple way to add genes to the swine DNA. But it has limitations in developing pigs for xenotransplantation, he said.

"You can add a gene, but you cannot alter or remove a gene using this technique," said Prather. It is known that some other genes will have to be altered or removed in order to create animals for the xenotransplantation of organs, he said.

The technique to make transgenic pigs used by the Italians "is easier and highly efficient," said Dr. David H. Sachs, a researcher at Massachusetts General Hospital and Harvard Medical School.

There are already proven methods in use to transfer genes and he said the new technique is a "quantitative" advance.

"This is a very nice improvement to get transgenic animals, but it is not something that wasn't already available," said Sachs.

Pig parts have been used to replace heart valves in humans, but replacing entire organs represents a significantly more complex challenge.

One of the concerns about xenotransplantation is the possibility that unrecognized swine viruses could be transferred into human patients along with the transplanted organ, experts say.
Sačuvana
mahi
Gost
« Odgovor #4 poslato: 24.10.2002. 03:20:57 »

Pa svinjski i ljudski genom se ralikuje u nekim sitnim i nebitinim delovima hromozoma smile, tako da ce uskoro trasplantacije (ako vec nisu)  bice obezbedjene od svinje na ljude, i obrnuto ... Koliko se ja secam bilo je potrebno geentski modifikovati svinju, jerbo jedan protein je pospesivao odbacivanje organa ...
Sačuvana
Stranice: [1]
  Štampaj  
 
Prebaci se na:  



Užice na Internetu
Pokreće MySQL Pokreće PHP Powered by SMF 1.1 RC3 | SMF © 2001-2006, Lewis Media | Imprint Ispravan XHTML 1.0! Ispravan CSS!
Stranica je napravljena za 2.568 sekundi sa 33 upita.