Motivation From Protein to Gene

Similar documents
Chapter 20 Recombinant DNA Technology. Copyright 2009 Pearson Education, Inc.

B. Incorrect! Ligation is also a necessary step for cloning.

Selected Techniques Part I

Computational Biology I LSM5191

Molecular Cell Biology - Problem Drill 11: Recombinant DNA

Molecular Genetics Techniques. BIT 220 Chapter 20

CAP BIOINFORMATICS Su-Shing Chen CISE. 10/5/2005 Su-Shing Chen, CISE 1

Chapter 10 Genetic Engineering: A Revolution in Molecular Biology

CHAPTER 20 DNA TECHNOLOGY AND GENOMICS. Section A: DNA Cloning

2054, Chap. 14, page 1

Site directed mutagenesis, Insertional and Deletion Mutagenesis. Mitesh Shrestha

Lecture Four. Molecular Approaches I: Nucleic Acids

Fatchiyah

Methods for Working with DNA and RNA

Chapter 6 - Molecular Genetic Techniques

Chapter 15 Gene Technologies and Human Applications

Chapter 20 Biotechnology

Chapter 8: Recombinant DNA. Ways this technology touches us. Overview. Genetic Engineering

GENETICS EXAM 3 FALL a) is a technique that allows you to separate nucleic acids (DNA or RNA) by size.

BIOLOGY - CLUTCH CH.20 - BIOTECHNOLOGY.

Recent technology allow production of microarrays composed of 70-mers (essentially a hybrid of the two techniques)

2014 Pearson Education, Inc. CH 8: Recombinant DNA Technology

Genetics Lecture 21 Recombinant DNA

Biotechnology. Chapter 20. Biology Eighth Edition Neil Campbell and Jane Reece. PowerPoint Lecture Presentations for

CH 8: Recombinant DNA Technology

BIOTECHNOLOGY. Sticky & blunt ends. Restriction endonucleases. Gene cloning an overview. DNA isolation & restriction

Bootcamp: Molecular Biology Techniques and Interpretation

Chapter 20 DNA Technology & Genomics. If we can, should we?

Applicazioni biotecnologiche

PLNT2530 (2018) Unit 6b Sequence Libraries

Bi 8 Lecture 4. Ellen Rothenberg 14 January Reading: from Alberts Ch. 8

Gene Expression Technology

Recombinant DNA Technology

Biotechnology. Chapter 20. Biology Eighth Edition Neil Campbell and Jane Reece. PowerPoint Lecture Presentations for

CELL BIOLOGY - CLUTCH CH TECHNIQUES IN CELL BIOLOGY.

AP Biology Gene Expression/Biotechnology REVIEW

Expressed genes profiling (Microarrays) Overview Of Gene Expression Control Profiling Of Expressed Genes

Recitation CHAPTER 9 DNA Technologies

BIOTECHNOLOGY. Biotechnology is the process by which living organisms are used to create new products THE ORGANISMS

Multiple choice questions (numbers in brackets indicate the number of correct answers)

Chapter 1. from genomics to proteomics Ⅱ

Genetic Engineering & Recombinant DNA

Reading Lecture 8: Lecture 9: Lecture 8. DNA Libraries. Definition Types Construction

3. Translation. 2. Transcription. 1. Replication. and functioning through their expression in. Genes are units perpetuating themselves

Recombinant DNA Technology. The Role of Recombinant DNA Technology in Biotechnology. yeast. Biotechnology. Recombinant DNA technology.

Learning Objectives :

The Biotechnology Toolbox

Enzyme that uses RNA as a template to synthesize a complementary DNA

DNA and Biotechnology Form of DNA Form of DNA Form of DNA Form of DNA Replication of DNA Replication of DNA

CHAPTERS 16 & 17: DNA Technology

Chapter 20: Biotechnology

Biology 201 (Genetics) Exam #3 120 points 20 November Read the question carefully before answering. Think before you write.

Genetics and Genomics in Medicine Chapter 3. Questions & Answers

Blotting Techniques (Southern blot, Northern blot, Western blot, and Eastern blot)

Chapter 9 Genetic Engineering

2 Gene Technologies in Our Lives

Molecular Biology: Gene cloning

SCREENING AND PRESERVATION OF DNA LIBRARIES

DNA Technology. B. Using Bacteria to Clone Genes: Overview:

Bi 8 Lecture 5. Ellen Rothenberg 19 January 2016

Concept 13.1 Recombinant DNA Can Be Made in the Laboratory

Design. Construction. Characterization

GENETICS - CLUTCH CH.15 GENOMES AND GENOMICS.

Page 70 Monday December 8, 2014

Genetics and Biotechnology. Section 1. Applied Genetics

Unit 8: Genomics Guided Reading Questions (150 pts total)

Lecture Series 10 The Genetics of Viruses and Prokaryotes

Lecture 22: Molecular techniques DNA cloning and DNA libraries

Biotechnology Chapter 20

Biology 105: Introduction to Genetics PRACTICE FINAL EXAM Part I: Definitions. Homology: Reverse transcriptase. Allostery: cdna library

Biotechnology and DNA Technology

Overview: The DNA Toolbox

Problem Set 8. Answer Key

Biotechnology. Cloning. Transformation 2/4/ glue DNA

Test Bank for Molecular Cell Biology 7th Edition by Lodish

2. Outline the levels of DNA packing in the eukaryotic nucleus below next to the diagram provided.

Molecular Genetics Quiz #1 SBI4U K T/I A C TOTAL

Chapter 15 Recombinant DNA and Genetic Engineering. Restriction Enzymes Function as Nature s Pinking Shears

Basic lab techniques

Unit 6: Molecular Genetics & DNA Technology Guided Reading Questions (100 pts total)

Molecular Genetics II - Genetic Engineering Course (Supplementary notes)

Biotechnolog y and DNA Technology

Biotechnology: DNA Technology & Genomics

Non-Organic-Based Isolation of Mammalian microrna using Norgen s microrna Purification Kit

3.1.4 DNA Microarray Technology

Biotechnology. Biotechnology is difficult to define but in general it s the use of biological systems to solve problems.

Restriction Enzymes (endonucleases)

7/24/2012. DNA Probes. Hybridization and Probes. CLS 420 Immunology & Molecular Diagnostics. Target Sequences. Target Sequences. Nucleic Acid Probes

This place covers: Methods or systems for genetic or protein-related data processing in computational molecular biology.

DESIGNER GENES - BIOTECHNOLOGY

M Keramatipour 2. M Keramatipour 1. M Keramatipour 4. M Keramatipour 3. M Keramatipour 5. M Keramatipour

Molecular Cloning. Genomic DNA Library: Contains DNA fragments that represent an entire genome. cdna Library:

Weaver 4th ed Ch 4+5 Methods etc

Learning Objectives. 2. Restriction Endonucleases 3. Cloning 4. Genetic Engineering 5. DNA libraries 6. PCR 7. DNA Fingerprinting

Combining Techniques to Answer Molecular Questions

Lecture #1. Introduction to microarray technology

Biotechnology and Genomics in Public Health. Sharon S. Krag, PhD Johns Hopkins University

LECTURE TOPICS 3) DNA SEQUENCING, RNA SEQUENCING, DNA SYNTHESIS 5) RECOMBINANT DNA CONSTRUCTION AND GENE CLONING

Chapter 13: Biotechnology

Chapter 13A: Viral Basics

Transcription:

MOLECULAR BIOLOGY 2003-4 Topic B Recombinant DNA -principles and tools Construct a library - what for, how Major techniques +principles Bioinformatics - in brief Chapter 7 (MCB) 1 Motivation From Protein to Gene Isolate protein (in diseased blood) Determine few aa in the sequence Synthesize oligonucleotide HOW??. Isolate the gene Sequence the gene 2 1

Motivation From Gene to Protein Isolate genomic clone (some defect?) Isolate relevant RNA Sequence it Define the aa Comparative, search in DB Cloning in expression vector Protein production, biochemical function 3 Additional information Bioinformatics tools and methods DB search Comparative proteomics & genomics Not in this course 4 2

7.1 DNA cloning with plasmid vectors Recombinant DNA technology depends on the ability to produce large numbers of identical DNA molecules (clones) DNA fragment of interest is inserted into a vector DNA molecule. When a DNA in vector is introduced into a host cell, large numbers of the fragment are reproduced along with the vector Two common vectors are E. coli plasmid vectors and bacteriophage λ vectors 7.1 Plasmids are extrachromosomal selfreplicating DNA molecules Figure 7-1 3

7 8 4

9 10 5

7.1 Plasmid cloning permits isolation of DNA fragments from complex mixtures Figure 7-4 7.1 Restriction enzymes cut DNA molecules at specific sequences Figure 7-5a 6

7.1 Selected restriction enzymes Site for cutting Length of recognition site Blunt/sticky Modification sensitivity Practically - price, stability, false cut 7.1 Restriction enzymes cut DNA molecules at specific sequences Figure 7-5b 7

15 16 8

7.1 Polylinkers facilitate insertion of restriction fragments into plasmid vectors Figure 7-8 9

7.2 Constructing DNA libraries with λ phage and other cloning vectors Cloning all of the genomic DNA of higher organisms into plasmid vectors is not practical. Instead vectors derived from bacteriophage are used. A collection of clones that includes all the DNA sequences of a given species is called a genomic library A genomic library can be screened for clones containing a sequence of interest 6.3 Virus/phage particles can be counted in plaque assays Figure 6-14 10

6.3 Bacterial viruses commonly used in biochemical and genetic research T phages of E. coli Temperate phages (bacteriophage λ) Small DNA phages RNA phages 7.2 The bacteriophage genome Figure 7-10 11

6.3 Bacteriophage λ undergoes either lytic replication or lysogeny following infection of E. coli ~100/cell 1000 more efficient than transformation Length up to 50 kb Figure 6-19 Lambda phage -An alternative method for genomic representation 24 12

7.2 Nearly complete genomic libraries of higher organisms can be prepared by λ cloning Figure 7-12 26 13

A library in lambda bacteriophage A larger genomic piece More effective host bacterial transfection Higher yield A genomic library (25-50 kb) A cdna library representing a tissue/condition 1. How to get all mrna in a cell? 2. How to apply cloning methods? 3. How to make mrna isolable? 27 A cdna library 1. Isolate ALL RNA (trna, mrna, rrna, srna ) 2. Purifying only mrna on polyt beads 3. Elute all mrna TTTTTTTT AAAAA AAAAA TTTTTTTT AAAAA TTTTTTTT 28 14

29 30 15

31 32 16

33 34 17

35 Recombinant DNA technologies DETECTION METHODS Sequencing reaction (tirgul) PCR and RT-PCR (tirgul) 18

7.3 Identifying, analyzing, and sequencing cloned DNA The most common approach to identifying a specific clone involves screening a library by hybridization with labeled (radioactively) DNA or RNA probes. Library - A global collection of genomic region, transcribed sequences, proteins, peptides etc 7.3 The membrane-hybridization assay Melt Double stranded DNA DNA binds to filter Single-stranded DNA Filter Incubate with labeled DNA Wash away labeled DNA that did not hybridize to DAN bound to filter Hybridized complemetary DNAs Perform autoradiography Figure 7-17 19

7.1 Small DNA molecules can be chemically synthesized Synthetic DNA is useful for: generating polylinker sequences sequencing DNA isolating clones of interest creating site-specific mutations Oligonucleotide for PCR DNA chip technology. Method: 3 to 5 direction systematic exposure of reactive sites 7.3 Oligonucleotide probes design Probes - Unique (20 mer - 4 20 = 10 12 ) For protein - 7 aa Degenerative probes Figure 7-19 20

7.3 Oligonucleotide probes are designed based on partial protein sequences Labeled - 5 polynucleotide kinase Figure 7-19 42 21

Probes may be Synthetic poly-nucleotide mrna (or any genomic/ genetic string) Antibodies Peptides Drug 43 7.3 Specific clones can be identified based on properties of the encoded proteins Figure 7-21 22

Typical Questions in Molecular research 1. Homologue gene from yeast to man? 2. An antibody in serun of diseased condition? 3. Cancer cell -Any new gene is expressed? 4. Treated with drug -which transcript is suppressed? 5. Parenthood, criminal evidence - profile? 6. And many, many more. 7.3 Gel electrophoresis resolves DNA/protein fragments of different size Figure 7-22 23

7.3 Visualization of restriction fragments separated by gel electrophoresis Figure 7-23 7.5 Southern blotting detects specific DNA fragments Figure 7-32 24

7.5 Northern blotting detects specific mrnas Figure 7-33 Western Blot - your protein Separation on gel a protein mixture Blotting (solid phase matrix) Specific probe (antibodies) Detection method (enzyme, Radiolabel, luminescence ) 25

7.3 DNA sequencing: the Sanger method Four separate polymerization reactions are performed Figure 7-29a 26

7.3 DNA sequencing: the Sanger (dideoxy) method Figure 7-29b,c 27

55 7.3 Few words on ESTs Large set of expressed cdna partially sequenced 200-500nt Over 3 million public In silico cloning Very important source for finding new genes, alternative spliced etc. Figure 7-26 28

Few words on PCR Alternative technology to classical cloning Method to recover minute amounts of DNA (crime scene) Method to detect Alternative splicing Method to introduce mutations Many more. Figure 7-26 58 29

59 7.6 Producing high levels of proteins from cloned cdnas Many proteins are normally expressed at very low concentrations within cells, which makes isolation of sufficient amounts for analysis difficult To overcome this problem, DNA expression vectors can be used to produce large amounts of full length proteins 30

7.6 E. coli expression systems can produce full-length proteins Figure 7-36 7.6 Even larger amounts of a desired protein can be expressed with a two-step system Figure 7-37 31

7.4 Bioinformatics Bioinformatics is the rapidly developing area of computer science devoted to collecting, organizing, and analyzing DNA and protein sequences Using searches based on homologous sequences, stored sequences suggest functions of newly identified genes and proteins New technologies New opportunities to understand the molecular level of life The role of Bioinformatics in the Human Genome Project 32

7.4 The C. elegans genome encodes numerous proteins specific to multicellular organisms Analyzing complex mixtures A cellular snapshot Detect the presence and the amounts of complementary nucleic acids in complex mixtures including total cellular RNA 33

7.8 DNA microarrays: analyzing genome-wide expression DNA microarrays consist of thousands of individual gene sequences bound to closely spaced regions on the surface of a glass microscope slide DNA microarrays allow the simultaneous analysis of the expression of thousands of genes The combination of DNA microarray technology with genome sequencing projects enables scientists to analyze the complete transcriptional program of an organism during specific physiological response or developmental processes 34

7.8 A yeast genome microarray Figure 7-39 35

DNA Chip technology The yeast genome -a snapshot Clustering of expression data the cell program 36

7.8 Changes in yeast gene expression as cells deplete glucose from the growth media Figure 7-40a DeRisi: Coordinated regulation of functionally-related genes 37

DeRisi: Expression Time Course DNA Chip technology Currently, up to 20,000 DNA samples, or clones, can be arrayed on each microarray. DNA samples can include genes with known functions DNA samples can also include gene fragments (ESTs) whose function is unknown. 38

DNA CHIP analysis in determine the profile of a specific type of cancer Microarray Applications Detect expression of thousands of genes Many applications Identification of complex genetic diseases Drug discovery and toxicology Mutation and polymorphism (SNP) detection Pathogen analysis Detect patterns of gene expression between tissues or disease states 39

7.3 Additional material For your own fun Technologies 7.3 Pulsed-field gel electrophoresis separates large DNA molecules Chromosoe Separation Chromosome specific libraries Figure 7-26 40

7.5 Specific RNAs can be quantitated and mapped on DNA by nuclease protection Figure 7-34a,b 7.5 Transcription start sites can be mapped by S1 protection and primer extension Figure 7-35 41

RNA association Eukaryotic tissue 10,000-15,000 mrna ~5 copies ~4,000 copies ~100,000 copies abundance 84 42

85 86 43