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Biotechnology: Principles and Processes — CUET Biology hero
Class XII 🧬 Biology ~18 MCQs/year Ch 9 of 13

Biotechnology: Principles and Processes

CUET unit: Biotechnology and its Applications → Principles and Processes

📌 Snapshot

  • Chapter establishes the two core techniques of modern biotechnology: genetic engineering (rDNA technology) and bioprocess engineering (sterile large-scale cultivation).
  • Builds the rDNA toolkit step by step: restriction enzymes, DNA ligase, vectors (pBR322, Ti plasmid, retroviruses), competent host cells, PCR, bioreactors and downstream processing.
  • The Cohen-Boyer 1972 experiment (linking an antibiotic-resistance gene with a Salmonella plasmid, transferred into E. coli) is presented as the founding event of rDNA technology.
  • CUET tests this chapter heavily for nomenclature (EcoRI = Escherichia coli, strain R-Y-13, first enzyme), component identification (pBR322 features, PCR steps, bioreactor parts) and palindromic-sequence recognition.

📖 Detailed Notes

2.1 Core concepts

  • Biotechnology = techniques using live organisms / enzymes / cells to produce useful products and processes; modern restricted sense uses genetically modified organisms at large scale. (NCERT §9 intro, p. 163)
  • The European Federation of Biotechnology (EFB) definition: "The integration of natural science and organisms, cells, parts thereof, and molecular analogues for products and services." (NCERT §9 intro, p. 163)
  • Two core techniques enabled modern biotechnology: (i) genetic engineering — altering chemistry of genetic material (DNA/RNA) and introducing it into host to change phenotype; (ii) bioprocess engineering — sterile chemical-engineering ambience for desired microbe/eukaryotic-cell growth at large scale (antibiotics, vaccines, enzymes). (NCERT §9.1, p. 163-164)
  • An alien piece of DNA cannot multiply in a host unless linked to an origin of replication (ori) — the specific chromosomal sequence that initiates replication. Cloning = making multiple identical copies of any template DNA. (NCERT §9.1, p. 164)
  • The first artificial recombinant DNA was constructed by Stanley Cohen and Herbert Boyer in 1972 by linking an antibiotic-resistance gene to a native plasmid of Salmonella typhimurium using restriction enzymes ("molecular scissors") and DNA ligase, then transferring it into E. coli. (NCERT §9.1, p. 164-165)
  • Three basic steps of GM: (i) identification of DNA with desirable genes; (ii) introduction into the host; (iii) maintenance of introduced DNA in host and transfer to progeny. (NCERT §9.1, p. 165)
  • Restriction endonucleases — first such enzyme Hind II (characterised 1968) recognises a specific 6-bp recognition sequence. Over 900 restriction enzymes from 230+ bacterial strains are now known. (NCERT §9.2.1, p. 165)
  • Nomenclature: first letter = genus, next two letters = species, then strain letter, then Roman numeral for order of isolation, e.g. EcoRI = Escherichia coli RY 13, first enzyme. (NCERT §9.2.1, p. 165-166)
  • Nucleases come in two kinds: exonucleases (remove nucleotides from ends) and endonucleases (cut at specific internal positions). (NCERT §9.2.1, p. 166)
  • Restriction enzymes recognise palindromic sequences — read same on both strands in 5'→3'; cut a little away from centre of palindrome between the same two bases on opposite strands, leaving overhanging single-stranded sticky ends which hydrogen-bond with complementary cut counterparts and facilitate DNA ligase action. (NCERT §9.2.1, p. 166-167)
  • Gel electrophoresis — DNA fragments (negatively charged) move toward the anode through an agarose matrix (natural polymer from sea weeds); smaller fragments migrate farther; bands visualised by staining with ethidium bromide under UV light (bright orange bands); recovery of bands by cutting and elution. (NCERT §9.2.1, p. 168)
  • Cloning vector features: (i) ori controls copy number; (ii) selectable marker (antibiotic resistance — amp, tet, kan, chloramphenicol) lets you eliminate non-transformants; (iii) cloning sites — preferably single recognition sites for common restriction enzymes; (iv) modified pathogen-derived vectors for plant/animal cells. (NCERT §9.2.2, p. 169-170)
  • pBR322 (E. coli cloning vector): carries ori, rop (replication-protein gene), ampR and tetR resistance genes, and unique restriction sites — Hind III, EcoR I, BamH I, Sal I, Pvu II, Pst I, Cla I. Foreign DNA ligated at BamH I (in tetR) inactivates tetR; recombinants grow on amp but not on tet (insertional inactivation of antibiotic resistance). (NCERT §9.2.2, p. 169)
  • Alternative selectable marker — insertional inactivation of β-galactosidase: insertion-bearing colonies are colourless on chromogenic substrate; non-insert colonies are blue. (NCERT §9.2.2, p. 170)
  • Vectors for eukaryotes: Ti plasmid of Agrobacterium tumefaciens (disarmed; for dicot plants) and disarmed retroviruses for animal cells. (NCERT §9.2.2, p. 170)
  • Competent host: bacterial cells made competent by treatment with a divalent cation (Ca²⁺); rDNA enters via heat shock (ice → 42 °C → ice). Other delivery methods: micro-injection (animal nucleus), biolistics / gene gun (plant cells, gold/tungsten micro-particles), disarmed pathogen vectors. (NCERT §9.2.3, p. 170-171)
  • Processes of rDNA technology (sequence): isolation of DNA → fragmentation with restriction enzymes → isolation of desired fragment → ligation into vector → transfer to host → culture → product extraction. (NCERT §9.3, p. 171)
  • DNA isolation: cell-wall lysis with lysozyme (bacteria), cellulase (plants), chitinase (fungi); ribonuclease removes RNA; protease removes proteins; purified DNA precipitates as fine threads on adding chilled ethanol (collected by spooling). (NCERT §9.3.1, p. 171)
  • PCR (Polymerase Chain Reaction) — three steps per cycle: (i) Denaturation (heat), (ii) Primer annealing (two short chemically-synthesised oligonucleotides complementary to template), (iii) Extension by thermostable Taq polymerase from Thermus aquaticus; ~30 cycles amplify ~1 billion times. (NCERT §9.3.3, p. 172-173)
  • A protein-encoding gene expressed in a heterologous host gives a recombinant protein; large-scale production needs bioreactors processing 100-1000 L; bioreactors maintain optimal temperature, pH, substrate, salts, vitamins and oxygen. (NCERT §9.3.5, p. 173-174)
  • Stirred-tank bioreactor — cylindrical or curved-base vessel with agitator (stirrer), oxygen-delivery system, foam-control system, temperature- and pH-control systems and sampling ports. Sparged stirred-tank bioreactor passes sterile air bubbles for greater oxygen transfer area. (NCERT §9.3.5, p. 174)
  • Downstream processing = post-biosynthetic separation, purification, formulation with preservatives, clinical trials and quality-control testing; varies from product to product. (NCERT §9.3.6, p. 174-175)

2.2 Definitions to memorise

Term Definition Page
Biotechnology (EFB) Integration of natural science and organisms, cells, parts thereof, and molecular analogues for products and services 163
Genetic engineering Techniques to alter chemistry of DNA/RNA and introduce into host to change phenotype 163-164
Bioprocess engineering Maintenance of sterile ambience in chemical engineering for desired-microbe growth at large scale 164
Origin of replication (ori) Specific DNA sequence from where replication starts; also controls copy number 164, 169
Plasmid Autonomously replicating circular extra-chromosomal DNA 164
Restriction endonuclease Enzyme that recognises a specific sequence in DNA and cuts both strands at specific sugar-phosphate-backbone positions 165-166
Recognition sequence Specific 6-bp palindromic sequence recognised by a restriction endonuclease (e.g., GAATTC for EcoRI) 165, 167
Palindrome (in DNA) A sequence of base pairs that reads the same on the two strands when the orientation of reading is kept the same 166-167
Sticky ends Overhanging single-stranded stretches left after cutting; H-bond with complementary cut counterparts 167
Exonuclease Nuclease that removes nucleotides from the ends of DNA 166
Endonuclease Nuclease that cuts at specific positions within the DNA 166
Selectable marker Vector gene (often antibiotic resistance) that lets you identify and select transformants from non-transformants 169
Insertional inactivation Loss of function of a vector gene (e.g., tetR or β-galactosidase) because foreign DNA is inserted into it; used to select recombinants 169-170
Transformation Procedure by which a piece of DNA is introduced into a host bacterium 169
Competent cell Bacterial cell treated (with Ca²⁺) to make its membrane permeable to DNA 170-171
Biolistics / gene gun Plant-cell DNA-delivery by bombarding with high-velocity gold/tungsten micro-particles coated with DNA 171
PCR Polymerase Chain Reaction — in vitro amplification of a DNA segment via repeated denaturation, primer annealing and extension by Taq polymerase 172-173
Primers Small chemically-synthesised oligonucleotides complementary to regions of template DNA 173
Recombinant protein Protein produced when a protein-encoding gene is expressed in a heterologous host 173
Bioreactor Vessel (100-1000 L) in which raw materials are biologically converted into specific products under controlled conditions 174
Downstream processing Post-biosynthesis separation, purification, formulation and QC of the recombinant product 174-175

2.3 Diagrams / processes to remember

  • Figure 9.1, p. 166 — Action of EcoRI: cuts between G and A of the palindrome GAATTC / CTTAAG on vector and foreign DNA, generates sticky ends, which ligate to form recombinant DNA.
  • Figure 9.2, p. 167 — Flowchart of rDNA technology: same restriction enzyme cuts both foreign DNA and vector plasmid → ligase joins → recombinant DNA → transformation into E. coli (cloning host) → cells divide.
  • Figure 9.3, p. 168 — Agarose gel electrophoresis: wells at the cathode end (top); bands of largest fragments stay near wells, smallest run farthest toward anode; bright orange bands under UV after ethidium-bromide staining.
  • Figure 9.4, p. 169 — pBR322 map: ori, rop, ampR, tetR, and unique restriction sites Hind III, EcoR I, BamH I, Sal I, Pvu II, Pst I, Cla I.
  • Figure 9.5, p. 171 — DNA spooling: fine thread-like precipitate of purified DNA after addition of chilled ethanol, lifted out with a rod.
  • Figure 9.6, p. 172 — PCR cycle: (i) Denaturation (heat) → ssDNA; (ii) Annealing of two primers; (iii) Extension by Taq DNA polymerase; repeated for ~30 cycles to amplify ~1 billion times.
  • Figure 9.7, p. 174 — (a) Simple stirred-tank bioreactor: motor, foam-breaker, acid/base for pH, steam for sterilisation, flat-bladed impeller, culture broth, sterile-air inlet; (b) Sparged stirred-tank: sterile air bubbles sparged for increased oxygen-transfer area.

2.4 Common confusions / NTA trap points

  • EcoRI nomenclature: the "R" stands for the strain (RY 13), NOT for "restriction." NTA loves to swap "R = restriction" as a distractor. (p. 165-166)
  • **Sticky ends are produced because the enzyme cuts away from the centre of the palindrome** but between the same two bases on opposite strands — students sometimes write "cut at the centre" which would give blunt ends.
  • pBR322 selection logic: insertion at BamH I in tetR → recombinants grow on amp but NOT on tet; non-recombinants grow on both. Don't flip the resistance pattern.
  • Taq polymerase is from Thermus aquaticus, not from E. coli. Its key property is thermostability so it survives 94 °C denaturation.
  • Lysozyme = bacteria, cellulase = plants, chitinase = fungi — these three are routinely tested in match-the-following items.
  • **Ti plasmid is from Agrobacterium tumefaciens and is for dicot plants; retroviruses are the parallel vector for animal** cells. Don't swap.
  • Gel electrophoresis: DNA moves to anode (positive), not cathode — because DNA is negatively charged due to phosphate backbone.
  • PCR step order: Denaturation → Annealing → Extension. NTA sometimes reverses annealing and extension as a distractor.

🎯 Practice MCQs

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Q1. In the name "EcoRI," the letter "R" stands for:

▸ Show answer & explanation

Answer: B

NCERT explicitly states EcoRI comes from *Escherichia coli* RY 13 and "the letter 'R' is derived from the name of strain." "Restriction" is a deliberate trap distractor.

Q2. The first restriction endonuclease characterised, which depended on a specific six-base-pair recognition sequence, was:

▸ Show answer & explanation

Answer: C

Hind II was the first restriction endonuclease whose functioning depended on a specific six-base recognition sequence. EcoRI and BamHI were characterised later.

Q3. Which of the following sequences is a typical palindromic recognition sequence for EcoRI?

▸ Show answer & explanation

Answer: A

NCERT explicitly cites 5'-GAATTC-3' / 3'-CTTAAG-5' as the EcoRI palindrome (cut between G and A). The other sequences, though palindromic, are not given as EcoRI's recognition site.

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