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Biotechnology For All Mankind

September 1st, 2011 Comments off

Biotechnology is one of the most crucial technologies created by man. This type of technology has its own advantage and downside for humankind. For as long as it is utilized positively, this leading edge technology will certainly bring benefits to everybody. Life science is another branch of science that talks about life as its name indicates. Biotechnology is also about life and everything living thing in this world. This is also known as genetic engineering. The concept of this genetic engineering send fear to some of the people. Actually, genetically modified foods have not been proved to form health issue.

The use of this state-of-the-art technology has lots more to offer to humans. This can be a hope to all particularly during periods of famine. Because genetically modified crops, vegetables and fruits can survive in extreme temperature that normal crops cannot handle. The development of this newest technology has no bad effect to the environment. All doctors and scientist studying about life science and biotechnology ensures this technology will do no harm to the environment.

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Potential Applications of Fungi; a Biotechnological Aproach

August 25th, 2011 Comments off

Fungi are prominent sources of pharmaceuticals and are utilised in several industrial fermentative processes, such as the production of enzymes, vitamins, pigments, lipids, glycolipids, polysaccharides and polyhydric alcohols.

For the duration of the past 50 years, many key advancements in medicine came from lower organisms such as molds, yeasts and the other diver’s fungi. Fungi are very helpful in producing high value products like mycoproteins and acts as plant growth promoters and disease suppressor. Fungal secondary metabolites are critical to our health and nutrition and have tremendous economic impact. In addition to this, fungi are incredibly useful in carrying out biotransformation processes. Recombinant DNA technologies, which consists of yeasts and other fungi as hosts, has markedly increased market place for microbial enzymes.

Nowadays, fungal biotechnology is a key participant in the global business due to its mind blowing prospective.

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Vacine (Biotechnology)

August 16th, 2011 Comments off

Vaccination is a method in biotechnology that has been in use for a long time now. A vaccine is any preparation intended to create immunity to a disease by stimulating the production of antibodies. Vaccines typically include a little amount of an agent that resembles a microorganism. The agent stimulates the body’s immune method to recognize the agent as foreign, destroy it, and remember it, so that the immune system can a lot more easily recognize and destroy any of these microorganisms that it encounters at a later stage. The most common technique of administering vaccines is by inoculation, but some are given by mouth or nasal spray (Deborah yao).

Vaccines can be prophylactic (i.e. to avoid or ameliorate the effects of a future infection by any natural pathogen) or therapeutic. There are several types of vaccines presently in use: Initial, there are those vaccines containing previously virulent micro-organisms which have been killed with chemicals or heat (e.g. vaccines against flu and cholera). There are vaccines that contain live microorganisms cultivated under conditions that disable their virulent properties (e.g. vaccines for measles, mumps and yellow fever). Other vaccines are inactivated toxic compounds in situations where these (rather than the micro-organism itself) trigger illness (e.g. vaccines for tetanus and diphtheria). These are referred to as toxoid vaccines. Some vaccines are produced from protein subunits, that are rather than introducing an inactivated or attenuated micro-organism to an immune system (which would constitute a “complete-agent” vaccine), a fragment of it is utilized to create an immune response (e.g. the subunit vaccine utilised against Hepatitis B virus that is composed of only the surface proteins of the virus). Finally, there are some certain bacteria that have polysaccharide outer coats that are poorly immunogenic. These outer coats are linked to proteins (e.g. toxins) such that the immune technique can be led to recognize the polysaccharide as if it had been a protein antigen (e.g. in the Haemophilus influenzae sort B vaccine).

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Biotech Venture Capital Endeavours

August 8th, 2011 Comments off

Biotech- venture capital, these two go hand in hand. The amazing advances in the field of biotechnology has made it possible for a number of entrepreneurs to start out on their own. Biotechnology is the future of medicine and no one knows that better than the entrepreneurs of today. Therefore they have made it a point to actively seek out their fortune in the biotech industry.

Biotechnology Offers

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