Biology And Physiology Flashcards
Give named examples of recombinant human proteins and describe their clinical and reasearch applications
Recombinant Insulin, Growth hormone, Clotting factors and metabollic enzymes can all be used to replace defective proteins in endocrine and metabolic disorders
Recombinant Growth hormone receptor inhibitors can be used to interfere with harmful molecular proteins produced by the body
Recombinant erythropoietin can be used to enhance/augment existing pathways
Outline the benefits of using rDNA technology to produce purified
human proteins for research or therapeutic uses
rDNA is Useful as proteins are very complex molecules with highly specific functions that are difficult to replicate in chemical drugs.
They can also therfore produce human proteins from non-human sources
They can improve stability, yield or ADME properties
Reduced possibilty of immune rejecion or allergic reaction which could occur when obtained from a non-human source
Give examples of how genetically engineered modifications to protein
sequences (e.g. insulin, EPO, cerezyme) can alter activity or ADME properties
Erythropoietin is a growth factor which stimulates erythrocyte production in bone marrow.
It is used to treat chronic anaemia in CKD. It is a glycosylated protein with a half life of 5 hours in the blood, by a change of 2 amino acids introduces 2 additional N-glycosulated sites which increases the half life by 3 fold meaning fewer injections would be required
Describe problems/ barriers encountered with producing human proteins
using bacterial expression systems
- Human genes contain introns and exons which do not exist in bacteria so they can not process the introns and remove them
- So we remove intron sequences using cDNA(copy of processed RNA)
- Bacterial RNA polymerase can not recognise mammalian promoter sequence
- To achieve this we use Reverse transcriptase to make cDNA from an RNA template
- This is the first strand synthesis
- We also have to degrade the mRNA so we are only left with the cDNA,
- We can then use a DNA polymerase and a random primer to generate the second strand which can thus be use
- This is the first strand synthesis
Be able to describe the features of other expression systems e.g yeast, plant,
or mammalian cells, or transgenic plants and animals (GMOs)
Be able to define what a GMO is and discuss the potential risks/ hazards and
Containment requirements associated with production of GMOs
Be able to describe different host/vector expression systems, bacterial plasmids,
inducible promoters and their uses
Be able to name/describe genetic engineering toolkit components such as
Restriction enzymes, DNA ligase, PCR (Taq Polymerase), Reverse transcriptase,
Site-directed mutagenesis, DNA sequencing and how they are used.
Be able to describe in detail the the steps involved in cloning and bacterial
expression of a human protein, starting with mRNA from human tissue.
Describe methods used to purify and detect recombinant proteins including
inducible expression, epitope tags, western blots, affinity purification