chapter 7 part 3 Flashcards

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1
Q

polymerase chaine reaction (PCR)

A

automated version of DNA replication that produces millions of copies of a short target DNA segment

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2
Q

is PCR carried out in small or large volumes

A

small (less than 100 ul)

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3
Q

PCR requirements

A
  • double-stranded DNA template w/ target sequence
  • 4 DNA nucleotides
  • heat-stable DNA pol
  • 2 dif single-stranded DNA primers
  • buffer solution
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4
Q

Taq polymerase

A

Thermus aquaticus DNA polymerase used for PCR
- lives in hot springs

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5
Q

PCR steps

A
  1. denaturation - reaction heat to 95 C to denature DNA into single strands
  2. primer annealing - temp reduced to 45-68 C to allow primers to hybridize to complementary sequences
  3. primer extension - temp raised to 72 C to allow Taq pol to synthesize DNA
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6
Q

realtime-PCR/qPCR

A

modification to traditional PCR
- use spectrophotometer in each well to measure DNA product production in real-time
- use detection methods

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7
Q

most common detection method for realtime-PCR

A

fluorescent dyes like SYBR Green

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8
Q

benefits of realtime PCR

A
  • can be used to quantitate starting amount of template DNA present accurately
  • reduces detection time and uses less concentrated DNA/RNA templates
  • doesn’t require DNA electrophoresis to detect products after amplification
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9
Q

ddPCR

A

newest version of PCR
- creates 10s of 1000s of nanoliter-sized droplets, each containing all the components of a PCR reaction
- PCR performed in each droplet
- amount of dNA in each nano droplet read
- analyze results

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10
Q

benefits of ddPCR

A
  • single sample generates 10s of 1000s of data points, increasing stat power and allowing for high levels of quantitation within a single sample
  • highly quantitative and very sensitive
  • unparalleled precision
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11
Q

Sanger sequencing development

A

Frederick Sanger in 1977

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12
Q

what is Sanger sequencing also known as

A

dideoxynucleotide DNA sequencing (dideoxy sequencing)

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13
Q

Sanger sequencing

A

uses DNA polymerase to replicate new DNA from single-stranded template
- 4 standard dNTP bases present in large amounts
- each reaction contains small amount of 1 dideoxynucleotide (ddNTP)
- separate reaction carried out for A, T, G, and C using corresponding small amount of one particular ddNTP
- reaction tubes produce series of partial DNA molecules
- all 4 reactions run side by side on DNA gel to determine complete sequence
- newer technologies use fluorescently laced ddNTPs and run all 4 in same lane

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14
Q

ddNTP

A

lacks 3’- OH group
- can’t be added onto (chain terminates)
- replication “poison”

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15
Q

what happens when a ddNTP is incorporated into the product DNA molecule

A

replication ceases

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16
Q

how is a DNA gel read

A

from bottom to top

17
Q

automated DNA sequencing

A
  • single reaction for each DNA sequence (all 4 ddNTPs included)
  • each ddNTP labeled w/ unique fluorescent marker
  • DNA synthesized, mixture of fragments produced and run on gel
  • labels have dif wavelengths, laser light excites fluorescent tags
  • wavelength read and recorded by computer
18
Q

next generation DNA sequencing

A
  • hundreds of thousands to millions of DNA fragments in parallel
  • decrease in cost, increase in speed
  • identifies sequence of DNA strand during synthesis rather than by chain termination method of dideoxy sequencing
19
Q

third-generation sequencing and NGS differ from Sanger by:

A
  1. using PCR to amplify DNA to allow feasible sequencing of repetitive DNA
    - massively parallel, millions of sequencing reads in each run
20
Q
A