Bacterium

Label:
Bacterium

Description:
Illustration of bacterium containing plasmids with foreign DNA. By the end of the 1960s, DNA could be cut and pasted. But scientists needed a mechanism to copy it in order to maintain a large enough sample to work with. That breakthrough came in 1971, when scientists found an efficient way to introduce tiny loops of DNA called plasmids into E. coli. These loops of plasmid DNA can carry a package of foreign DNA into the host cell, and confer a benefit such as drug resistance. Scientists can import plasmids containing a selected piece of DNA into a bacterium. Normal bacterial reproduction produces huge quantities of the desired DNA.

Biological elements:
bacterium, plasmids

Concepts precesses:

Tools & methods :



Your Genes, Your Health ( YGYH )
DNA From The Beginning ( DNAFTB )
Dolan DNA Learning Center ( DNALC )
Genetic Origins ( GeneticOrigins )
adi_at_dnai