JOIN NOW LOG IN
iVillage GardenWeb iVillage GardenWeb THE INTERNET'S GARDEN & HOME COMMUNITY ADVERTISEMENT
Blogs Forums Photo Galleries Ask The Experts Tools & Directories        
Return to the Hybridizing Forum | Post a Follow-Up

 o
Bioengineering

Posted by redphoenix (My Page) on
Fri, Aug 15, 03 at 22:01

Reading the posts has started me thinking...it seems that it would be hard but not impossible to do some basic bioengineering. My school has a biotechnology class where you splice genes, so that couldn't take too much equipment. Can anybody give me any resources to get me started?

Thanks,
redphoenix


Follow-Up Postings:

 o
RE: Bioengineering

Hi, I have a degree in biotechnology. Gene splicing in plants is not usually done, beginners use bacteria. Bacteria readily uptake new chromosome plasmids. Plants do not do this.
To tell you how to get started, I would really know exactly what you plan to do. This is also VERY expensive to perform. Reagents for these experiments can cost upwards of a couple hundred dollars.
I would take plant tissue culture courses if you can. The course offered at your school most likely is a course that deals with bacterial DNA work. Plant physiology courses are also very important. THere are some textbooks on this type of work, however many of them are lacking imformation. Look up plant tissue culture. That should help you out. I think that you will only find journal articles on plant gene work that are very advanced.
I am interested on what you would like to do! I know that they just found the DNA sequence for snapdragon's yellow color. They are attempting to place this in the african violet's DNA to allow the violet to produce this color. Maybe do some searchs for this and find out how they have performed this experiment. There should be many journals in a college library and you should find this info in one of those journals.
-renee


 
 

 

 


Click here to learn more about in-text links on this page.



iVillage GardenWeb: The Internet's Garden & Home Community  
  iVillage Home & Garden Network