Genes
By: Victor • Essay • 424 Words • December 19, 2009 • 878 Views
Essay title: Genes
Gene therapy is a potentially experimental technique that uses genes to treat or prevent disease. In the future, this technique may allow doctors to treat a disorder by inserting a gene into a patient’s cells instead of using drugs or surgery. Researchers are testing several approaches to gene therapy, including:
• Replacing a mutated gene that causes disease with a healthy copy of the gene.
• Deactivating a mutated gene that is functioning improperly.
• Introducing a new gene into the body to help fight a disease.
Each of us carries about half a dozen defective genes. Most of us do not suffer any harmful effects from our defective genes because we carry two copies of nearly all genes, one derived from our mother and the other from our father. The only exceptions to this rule are the genes found on the male sex chromosomes. Males have one X and one Y chromosome, the former from the mother and the later from the father, so each cell has only one copy of the genes on these chromosomes. In the majority of cases, one normal gene is sufficient to avoid all the symptoms of disease. If the potentially harmful gene is recessive, then its normal counterpart will carry out all the tasks assigned to both. Only if we inherit from our parents two copies of the same recessive gene will a disease develop. On the other hand, if the gene is dominant, it alone can produce the disease, even if its counterpart is normal.
Many medical conditions result from flaws, or