- challenge of scale (very thin and no physical features that mark genes)
-challenge of numbers (1 gene- 1/millionth genome, some genes ecpressed in small fraction of cells)
locate a gene/ DNA sequence, remove/copy DNA sequence, Visualize DNA, store new DNA sequences, Edit any genome
locate a gene/ DNA sequence, remove/Copy DNA sequence, Visualize DNA, store new DNA sequences.
technique in molecular genetics where scientists combine DNA from two sources to a create new DNA. this is usually done using a vector like a plasmid.
genetic engineering
small circula double stranded DNA that can naturally exist in bacterial cells along side the bacterial genome . have the ability to replicate indepedent of bacterial cell genome using an (ori) encodded in a dna sequence inside plasma.
synthetic DNA fragments containing restriction sites
an ori, one or more selectable markers, recognition sites for one or more restriction enzymes
because it allows cells containing the vector to be selected or identified
plasmids need these sites for cleavage because this is where the restriction enzymes (restriction endonucleases) can cut the DNA at specific sequences. allows insertion/ removal of specific genes/ DNA fragments within the plasmid.
creates sticky ends (overhangs/blunt ends) that can be used to join other pieces of DNA. allowing precision when inserting new foreign DNA.
typically cleaved with the same restriction enzyme
they have highly engineered sequences to optimize various functions (high copy number, inducible, high protein expression).
activated by high stress enviornment, bacterium takes up foreign DNA from dead bacterium and incorporates it within its genome, survival mechanism, provides anatiobiotic resistance
no (hence recombinant DNA)
make it able to take up foreign DNA
after creating a recombinant plasmid with the gene of interest, the plasmid is introduced into bacteria under special conditons allowing them to take it up. once it is taken up the bacteria can replicate it and make copies of the plasmid.
no, that is why scientists use antibiotic selection when experimenting, since the plasmid generally has antiobiotic resitance, only bacteria that succesffully taken up the plasmid will survive when grown on agar plant with antiobiotic. allows for selection and isolation
bacterial cells with their resident plasmids can be quickly cheaply expanded
these transformed bacteria can be put in glycerol and frozen and stored at -80 celsisus with little to no effect on cell health of DNA degradation (ability to store new genetic seuqences)
yes circular DNA is very stable
using selectable markers on the plasmid (genes that encode a marker) which are typically visual or growth selective.
ampicillin resistance gene. when bacteria are spread on a lawn of media containing ampicillin only transfromants will grow into colonies
a single colony is picked and cultures into large isogenic (same genotype) bacterial cultures. plasmid DNA can be purified from these cultures
allow us to multiply and maintain DNA sequences indefinitely
enzymes that cleave the phosphodiester bonds within a polynucleotide chain. They cut DNA or RNA at specific internal sites, unlike exonucleases, which remove nucleotides from the ends of the chains.
DNA endonuclease enzymes
they were discovered in bacteria as a defense mechanism agaiant invading viruses by functioning as a part of a bacterial innante immune system by identifying and cutting foregin DNA. stop viral DNA from integrating into the bacterial genome
allows researchers to target and cut DNA at very specific sites. This enables precise genetic manipulation, such as cloning, gene editing, and the construction of recombinant DNA
5' overhang, 3' overhag, blunt end
5' leaves a cut in a way that leaves a single stranded 5' end, 3' leaves a single stranded 3' end. blunt end cuts straight through both strands leaving no overhangs
they need to be cut/digested with same enzyme and mixed for the overhang ends (sticky ends) to hybridize due to the correct homology
covalently seal (ligates) 'nicks' in sugar phosphate bonds on two ends. Thus, creates stable double stranded piece of DNA.
Recognition sequences occur at specific locations in the plasmid where the restriction enzyme cuts. also called restriction sites and only occur at this one location in plasmid.
Each restriction enzyme is named based on the species of bacteria in which it was discovered, with the first portion of the name (in italics) representing the bacterial genus or species.
through gel electrophoresis
gels (agarose or polacrylamide) where one side has small wells
gels are covered in ionic buffer and electric field is applied, DNA is made of acids and acids are negatively charged so they slowly migrate to th eother end of the gel (postive pole)
larger DNA fragments move slower through the gel matrix thus run slower than small DNA fragments (stay closer to the negative side)
DNA is stained with soemthing that binds to the nucleic acids (ex. ethidium bromide), this can be imaged with a cemra and a an appropriate light source (ex. UV light). certian DNA bands can be cut out of the gel and purified
polymerase chain reaction (PCR)
kary mullis 1983
1. single stranded DNA template (unwound by Helicases)
2. replication machinery (DNA polymerase)
3. RNA primers (created by primase)
4. free dNTPS
heat used to seperate double stranded DNA instead of helicase
dna polymerase supplied a test tube
dna primers (synthetically created)- small chains of nucleotides (17-25) that are complementary to the template and provide 3'-OH end for the polymerase to work with
free dNTPs supply in a test tube
polymerase chain reaction
1. DNA template ( double stranded)
2. primers (forward and reverse)
3. dNTPs
4. DNA polymerase (heat resistant)
5. buffer (ions)
heat to 90-100 celsisus for a few minutes
cooled 30-60 celsius rapidly for less than a minute. primers are in high conc, rapid cooling give advantage for small primer to bind template before larger single stranded DNA comes back together.
both forward and reverse primer
heat to 72 celsisu, polymerase tolerates the rapid heating in step 1
by the discovery of thermal resistant DNA polymerase in bacteria, thermus aquaticus
machine that allows repeated cycling of 3 primary steps (heating and cooling) 25-35 times
ideally doubles the number of copies of the target DNA.
copies of DNA= 2^N X inital copies of DNA. N is the number of PCR cycles.
Forward Primer: Binds to the beginning of the target sequence on the sense strand of DNA.
Reverse Primer: Binds to the end of the target sequence on the antisense strand of DNA.
By choosing primers that are complementary to specific regions flanking the target sequence, you ensure that only the desired segment of DNA is amplified
20nt long
Forward Primer: This should be designed to bind just upstream of the start codon (usually in the 5' untranslated region or UTR).
Reverse Primer: This should be designed to bind just downstream of the stop codon, in the 3' UTR or exon.
locate a gene/DNA sequence
true
no, on average, only 1/10th the genes in the genome is expressed in a cell
cells of different tissues express only a subset of genes
the first step is isolation of total RNA. first you collect cells or tissues of interest than extract the total RNA from the sample.
with oligo (dT) primers which are short sequences od deoxythumidine which bind to the poly-A tail of eukaryotic mRNA molecules. the poly A tail is unique to mRNA so the oligo primer ensure that only mRNA is reverse transcribed. (this is the starting point for the reverse transcription reaction)
RT is an enzyme that synthesizes cDNA from mRNA, it synthesizes the first strand by copying the mRNA template. it had both RNA- dependent DNA polymerase activity (mRNA--> cDNA) and RNase H activty (degrade RNA template after cDNA is made)
synthesizes cDNA from the 3' end of the mRNA and works toward the 5' end. results in a single stranded cDNA copy of the mRNA. RNase nicks the mRNA strand.
after RT and the first strand of cDNA being made, DNA polymerase I which comes from E.coli and has both polymerase and exonuclease activies is used to syntehsize the second strand of cDNA using dNTPS. adding complementary bases to the first cDNA strand.
since it also has RNase H activty, which removes the RNA strand from the original template, so it can be degraded after reverse transcription
double stranded cDNA molecules where one strand is complementary to the mRNA and the other strand is the reverse complement
it can be inserted into a cloning vector.
you will cut the vector (plasmid) with appropriate restriction enzymes to generate sticky or blunt ends that will allow for insertion of the cDNA.
the double stranded cDNA is ligated into the vector using DNA ligase which forms covalent bonds between the cDNA insert and the vector. now the cDNA is part of the plasmid vector and can be introduced into bacterial cells
how the ligated is introduced into competent E.coli, the bacteria that actually take up the plasmid will begin to replicate creating clones of the cDNA insert. the colonies can then be screened to identify the ones containing the desired cDNA insert
it is specific to a particular tissue, cell type, state or time. they can be created to capture gene expression profile of specific conditon or stage in the life cycle of an organism
helps us understand the protein sequence a gene product will make (gene structure/function) as well as for designing primers for downstream molecular cloning of these gene sequences into plasmids
sanger sequencing is the standard used for seuqencing DNA fragments in laboratories. created by frederick sanger and colleagues in 1970s, it is also called dideoxy sequencing.
1. DNA replication with DNA polymerase
2. DNA template
3. primers
1. number of primers
2. use of ddNTPS
3. concentration of ddNTPS
4.labeling for detection
5. amount of DNA required
pcr- 2 primers (F and R)
ss- 1 primer
PCR- uses dNTPS (deoxyribonucleotide triphosphate) to extend the DNA strand
ss: uses ddNTPS (dideoxyribonucleotide triphosphates), which lack the 3' hydroxyl group, causing DNA synthesis to terminate when incorportaed.
PCR: dNTPS are present in equal amounts
ss: ddNTPS are present at a 100 fold lower conc than dNTPS to ensure controlled termination of DNA synthesis
pcr: no special labelling is required
ss: primer or ddNTPS are labelled (radioactive or fluorescent) to visualize and read the sequence after electrophoresis
pcr: small amount of template DNA as the target region gets amplified
ss: large amount of DNA becuase PCR amplification or cloning comes before sequencing to produce a large amount of target DNA
the original version the primer is radioactively on the 5' end. the automated version the primer is not labelled
each ddNTP (A,C,G,T) is labelled with a different fluorescent probe (illustrated by green, purple, black, red etc.)
original: many copies of target DNA and primer are added to 4 tubes
automated: everything goes into one tube and one well on gel
1. lots of dNTPS
2.DNA polymerase
3. a small amount (1/100) of one of the 4 ddNTPS (A,C,G,T)- low conc to ensure random incorporation/chain termination at various points
gel electrophoresis to seperate by DNA length, very laborious, expensive
carried out by automated machines using laser scanners, imagers and software to read out DNA sequence
a peptide hormone, used in the treatment of diabetes
1.identify human tissues that expresses insluin (pancreas)
2. purify RNA from pancreatic tissue
3. use purified RNA to create cDNA from pancreatic mRNA
using known genetic sequence of insulin,design a forward (3' end) and reverse (complentary 5' end) DNA primer for inulin cDNA
then to the 5' ends of the forward and reverse primer add an extenstion of a few nucleotides which contain a restriction enzyme recognition site
in a PCR reaction they amplify the insulin cDNA
- load you PCR product on an agarose gel, then use gel electrophoresis to make sure your DNA band is the size you expect
cut your insulin cDNA band out of the gel and purify the DNA from the agarose gel
add restriction enzyme to your DNA fragment to cut at the restriction sites that you put on the ends, use the same enzyme to digest a plasmid optimized for expressing a protein in E.coli
we use the same RE to digest both becuase it will leave complentary DNA ends that will fit together. then ligate the insulin cDNA into the expression plasmid
it gets transformed into competent e.coli cells, then we allow it to grow then spread on a culture plate to obtain single colony isolates
we perform a PCR on anumber of different bacterial colonies (1-4) to confirm they contain the insert and not just a religated plasmid
designing one primer in the plasmid and one primer within the insulin cDNA would produce a product
use gel electrophoresis to visualize wheter you have a postive PCR product or not
After selecting colonies or cultures with the plasmid containing the insert, we purify the plasmid DNA. We then design primers that span both the insulin cDNA and the surrounding plasmid regions (flanking parts). The plasmid is sent for sequencing, and the resulting DNA sequence is analyzed to confirm the correct insertion of the insulin cDNA and ensure there are no mutations.