Not at all. There are many foods that you eat that have been genetically engineered to produce something better or faster than before.
Insulin - The Dude That's Friends With THE DUDE
C)Pigs and cows
Growing genetically engineered bacteria and collecting human DNA/proteins that they produce.
Genetically engineered insulin may have fewer side effects than the insulin previously extracted from the pancreases of other animals. This is because genetic engineering inserts human genes such as the gene for insulin production into the DNA of bacteria. As a result, the bacteria that produces human insulin, when used by diabetics, should produce fewer side effects.
Bacteria are the only organisms that can convert nitrogen into a usable form. Diazotroph or nitrogen-fixing bacteria are types of bacteria that perform this ability.
no because its a bacteria and only specialized types of agle can go in cold weather and its geneticly engineered
Just like any other bacteria. It depends on its growth requirements. They don't usually require anything extra unless engineered to need a particular nutrient. Agar would be the most common media used to grow bacteria and probably genetically engineered bacteria too.
clones
Insulin - The Dude That's Friends With THE DUDE
bacteria
Combing a portion of human DNA with bacterial DNA and inserting this into bacteria
Genetically engineered organisms. Bacteria, yeasts, spiders, goats, etc. have been genetically engineered to mass produce several proteins of medical interest.
Antibodies: chemical that are like glue to specific pathogenes. They stick to bacteria and viruses and make them incapable of effecting their manevolent lifecycle. Genetically engineered: Engineers fooling bacteria, plants or animals into making specified chemical for us. When I'm sick I'm all for them.
One way insulin can be produced is by injecting genetically engineered bacteria into your bloodstream. The insulin will multiply and each one will produce insulin. This is only helpful in fighting on kind of diabetes.
C)Pigs and cows
Introducing mutations into the bacteria is called "engineering" the bacteria. it allows bacteria to be developed that can be put to work for useful purposes (devouring oil spill gunk, as one example), and there are hundreds of other uses for engineered bacteria, too.
Both. You may have the genes, but if you don't drink you won't become an alcoholic.