BIOTECHNOLOGY
Biotechnology
is the use of living systems and organisms to develop or make products, or
"any technological application that uses biological systems, living
organisms or derivatives thereof, to make or modify products or processes for
specific use" (UN Convention on Biological Diversity, Art. 2). Depending
on the tools and applications, it often overlaps with the (related) fields of
bioengineering, biomedical engineering, biomanufacturing, etc.
For
thousands of years, humankind has used biotechnology in agriculture, food
production, and medicine.The term is largely believed to have been coined in
1919 by Hungarian engineer Károly Ereky. In the late 20th and early 21st
century, biotechnology has expanded to include new and diverse sciences such as
genomics, recombinant gene techniques, applied immunology, and development of pharmaceutical
therapies and diagnostic tests.
In medicine,
modern biotechnology finds applications in areas such as pharmaceutical drug
discovery and production, pharmacogenomics, and genetic testing (or genetic
screening).
Pharmacogenomics
(a combination of pharmacology and genomics) is the technology that analyses
how genetic makeup affects an individual's response to drugs. It deals with the
influence of genetic variation on drug response in patients by correlating gene
expression or single-nucleotide polymorphisms with a drug's efficacy or toxicity.
By doing so, pharmacogenomics aims to develop rational means to optimize drug
therapy, with respect to the patients' genotype, to ensure maximum efficacy with
minimal adverse effects. Such approaches promise the advent of
"personalized medicine"; in which drugs and drug combinations are
optimized for each individual's unique genetic makeup.
.Biotechnology
has contributed to the discovery and manufacturing of traditional small
molecule pharmaceutical drugs as well as drugs that are the product of
biotechnology - biopharmaceutics. Modern biotechnology can be used to
manufacture existing medicines relatively easily and cheaply. The first
genetically engineered products were medicines designed to treat human
diseases. To cite one example, in 1978 Genentech developed synthetic humanized
insulin by joining its gene with a plasmid vector inserted into the bacterium
Escherichia coli. Insulin, widely used for the treatment of diabetes, was
previously extracted from the pancreas of abattoir animals (cattle and/or
pigs). The resulting genetically engineered bacterium enabled the production of
vast quantities of synthetic human insulin at relatively low cost.Biotechnology
has also enabled emerging therapeutics like gene therapy. The application of
biotechnology to basic science (for example through the Human Genome Project)
has also dramatically improved our understanding of biology and as our
scientific knowledge of normal and disease biology has increased, our ability
to develop new medicines to treat previously untreatable diseases has increased
as well.

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