anaylzing cell systems 2 Flashcards
Some facts to remember
1/1000 nuceoltudes are different b/w human genomes
1.5% of DNA is exonic DNA
Single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNP) can be neutral, pathogeneic, or predisposing
What are restiction endonucleases?
Bacterial Enzymes that cut DNA in specfic sites can produce clean cuts or overhangs
What is agarose gel electrophoresis ?
Different than SDS-PAGE
DNA is already charged,
smaller dna seperated faster than larger
What is a ligase reaction?
Using Ligase to glue DNA strands back together (requires ATP)
Bacterial plasmids are used to do what?
- Used as cloning vectors
- Cleavage of segment of DNA via restriction nuclease
- endo nuclease cuts same strand
- restriction makes overhang but cutting through both
- Dna fragment to cloned is inserted (covalent linkage)
- recombinant DNA
plasmids engineered to serve various functions
Every gene can be put into bacteria and stored indefinitely and propagated at anytime
What are cDNA clones?
- DNA copy of mRNAs
- No introns
- Much smaller than original genome
- requires viral enzyme
- reverse trancriptase
What is the difference between cDNA and a Genome?
Genomic DNA = exons and introns
cDNA = Exonic
What is “simple description” PCR?
Polymerase Chain Reactions
Amplifies DNA regions
- heats DNA to seperate strands
- cool to anneal primers (additon of primer here)
- DNA synthesis
Process is repeated until the job is done
What is the “complex” def for PCR?
- DS dna obtained from patient, individual, or pathogen
- high temperature to denature or seperate into ssDNA
-
Primers designed to complement sequence that flank each end in 3-5’ direction
- Cooled and allowed to anneal (bind to DNA)
- add dNTP
- TAQ polymearse synthesizes copy of DNA by extending primers or both ends. DNA doubles each cycle and becomes greatly amplified
- reactions carried out in thermocycler - has programmable settings (Temp, Number of cycles etc)
- Advantage = very small amount DNA needed
- Disadvantage = need to seq for flanking portions for primer design, error prone, amplification of contaminating DNA
What is one example of application of PCR?
Presence HIV DNA that is amplified by PCR and recongized by gel eletrophoresis
What is qPCR?
Quantitative PCR
Used to quantify copy number of a specific gene in two or more samples in real time
In addition to primers, this technique includes a probe which fluoresces only a presence of PCR product
Probe usually complementary oligo with a fluorescent tag
Used to detect levels of infectious agent and determine levele of gene expression
What is restriction fragment length polymorphism?
when genomes from 2 individuals cleaved with a set of restriction enzymes and the fragments resolved on a gel pattern is different
SNPs occur in recongniton sequences for restriction enzymes
Used in DNA finger printing
used in foresic analysis, paternity testing and disease detections
What is one example of RFLP “restriction fragment length polymorphism” ?
- Normal beta globulin allele has 3 Ddel restricition sites
- Patients with sickle cell only have 2 restrictiion sites
- THis occurs because a GAG -> GUG
which casuses glu-> val (mut) - Cleavage of genomic DNA followed by Ddel followed by eeltrophoresis and southerning blotting including a B globin resulted in ……
- The dad only has 2 restriction endonucleo sites and the daughter is carrier of the diease
What are variable number of tandem repeats?
variation in short tandom repeats (STR) in individuals
regions are isolated from genomic samples by fanking restriction sites or PCR
useful in ID and severity of of disease
Ex: hunting disease, fragile Xs syndrome , and fredrich Ataxia
what is a DNA microarray?
Used to determine overall change in gene expression b/w 2 samples
each spot has a different DNA sequence from a different Gene
used to determine difference in gene expression between 2 samples
- isolated RNA from sample, make cDNA using reverse transcriptase, and adds a fluorescent dye (called probe)
- add a different fluorescent dye to 2nd sample
- inserted into microarray where it will bind to its complementary sequence
- more intense signal, higher degree of binding and highler level of gene expression