🌾 What is Biotechnology doing for our farms?
Biotechnology uses living things (or the enzymes they make) to boost food production and quality. Researchers focus on three big jobs: (1) finding or creating the best biological catalyst, (2) giving that catalyst perfect working conditions, and (3) cleaning up (down-stream processing) to get the final product ready for use. :contentReference[oaicite:0]{index=0}
🚀 Three smart ways to raise crop yields
- Agro-chemical farming — fertilisers & pesticides.
- Organic farming — nature-friendly inputs.
- Genetically engineered crops — tiny DNA tweaks for big gains. :contentReference[oaicite:1]{index=1}
🧪 Plant Tissue Culture = Growing whole plants from tiny pieces
Totipotency 🎯
A single plant cell (an explant) can grow into a complete plant. Scientists call this super-power totipotency. :contentReference[oaicite:2]{index=2}
Micro-propagation 🌱
By tweaking nutrients, vitamins, and growth hormones (auxins, cytokinins), labs quickly raise thousands of identical “somaclones.” Crops such as tomato, banana, and apple already use this method on a commercial scale. :contentReference[oaicite:3]{index=3}
Meristem-tip culture 🩹
Viral diseases rarely reach the shoot tips (meristems). Scientists cut out these virus-free tips and grow healthy, disease-free plants of banana, sugarcane, potato, and more. :contentReference[oaicite:4]{index=4}
Somatic hybridisation 🔗
Remove cell walls ➡️ fuse two naked protoplasts ➡️ grow a brand-new hybrid plant. A famous trial fused tomato + potato to make a “pomato.” (Cool idea, but the traits weren’t farm-ready yet!) :contentReference[oaicite:5]{index=5}
🧬 Genetically Modified (GM) Crops — Why bother?
- Tolerate heat, cold, drought, and salty soils.
- Stand up to insects, so farmers spray fewer chemicals.
- Stay fresh longer after harvest.
- Use soil minerals more efficiently, protecting fertility.
- Add extra nutrition (💛 golden rice packs vitamin A!). :contentReference[oaicite:6]{index=6}
- Even supply industry with special starches, fuels, or medicines. :contentReference[oaicite:7]{index=7}
🐛 Natural Insect Shield: Bt Crops
The soil bacterium Bacillus thuringiensis (Bt) makes protein crystals that kill specific insects. Scientists copied Bt cry genes (e.g., cryIAc
, cryIIAb
, cryIAb
) into crops like cotton and corn. Here’s the action-plan:
- Plant cell produces an inactive protoxin.
- Caterpillar eats the leaf; its alkaline gut (pH > 7) dissolves the crystal and converts protoxin → active toxin.
- Toxin sticks to mid-gut cells, punches holes, the insect dies. :contentReference[oaicite:8]{index=8}
Result? Healthy cotton bolls 🧺 instead of worm-eaten ruins. 🎉
🪱 RNA Interference (RNAi) — Silencing pests from the inside
The root-knot nematode Meloidogyne incognita slashes tobacco yield. Scientists slipped nematode-gene fragments into the plant using Agrobacterium. The plant now makes matching sense and anti-sense RNAs → they pair up into double-stranded RNA → the plant’s own machinery chops up the nematode’s message (mRNA). The nematode cannot make vital proteins and soon vanishes! 😎 :contentReference[oaicite:9]{index=9}
🎯 High-Yield NEET Flash Points
- Totipotency & Micro-propagation — core idea in tissue culture. :contentReference[oaicite:10]{index=10}
- Bt cotton mechanism — protoxin activation and insect specificity. :contentReference[oaicite:11]{index=11}
- RNA interference (RNAi) — gene silencing to fight nematodes. :contentReference[oaicite:12]{index=12}
- Somatic hybridisation — protoplast fusion & the pomato example. :contentReference[oaicite:13]{index=13}
- GM crop advantages — abiotic stress tolerance, nutrient enrichment (golden rice). :contentReference[oaicite:14]{index=14}
💡 Keep these ideas handy — they pop up often in NEET biology papers!