DNA Technology Part 4 - (Week 10) Flashcards

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1
Q

What is DNA sequencing?

A

DNA sequencing is the process of determining the sequence of nucleotides in a piece of DNA

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2
Q

What biological concept is used in DNA sequencing?

A

The concept of DNA replication

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3
Q

Name the two major types of DNA sequencing methods

A
  • Sanger sequencing (chain-termination/dideoxy sequencing)

- Next generation sequencing

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4
Q

What does Sanger sequencing require?

A
  • Many identical copies of the DNA to be sequenced
  • Oligonucleotide primer complementary to a short stretch of DNA
  • DNA polymerase
  • Deoxynucleotides (dNTPs)
  • Dideoxynucleotides
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5
Q

What are dideoxynucleotides?

A

Chain terminating nucleotides

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6
Q

Describe the 7 steps of (Sanger) DNA sequencing

A
  1. DNA mixed w/ primer and an excess of normal nucleotides & terminator bases w/ fluorescent markers attached
  2. Mixture placed in thermal cycler.
    96 deg. DNA strands separate.
    50 deg. primers anneal to the strand
    60 deg. polymerase builds new strands
  3. Whenever a terminator base is added chain stops (bases in low amounts added at random) to produce fragment of diff. lengths
  4. Fragments are separated according to their length by capillary sequencing (like gel electrophoresis)
  5. Fluorescent markers are used to identify final bases & lasers to detect diff. colours
  6. The order of bases in the capillary tubes shows the sequence of the complimentary strand
  7. The info is fed into a computer & the genome can be determined
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7
Q

What will the chromatogram look like after Sanger DNA sequencing has occurred?

A
  • Dideoxyribonucleotides will have different fluorescent tags
  • The chromatogram will show order of the nucleotides (from shortest to longest)
  • Peak heights represent diff. nucleotide bases
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8
Q

What can Sanger DNA sequencing be used for?

A

It allows for comparisons within a species or among separate species

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9
Q

Give a brief description of the next-generation sequencing method

A
  • It uses a single template strand that is immobilised & amplified to produce an enormous number of identical fragments
  • These fragments are sequenced in parallel
    (It is a type of high speed, ‘high-throughput’ technology)
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10
Q

Name at least one advantage of next-generation sequencing

A
  • High speed
  • Can produce enormous volume of sequences
  • Currently used for whole genome sequencing, research etc.
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11
Q

What is a possible reason that Sanger DNA sequencing is a better method than next-generation sequencing?

A

Although it is more expensive, Sanger sequencing is more precise & can predetermine the size of relatively longer stretches of DNA

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12
Q

What is gene therapy?

A

The alteration of an afflicted individual’s genes in order to replace a defective allele with a normal allele

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13
Q

How can gene therapy be done in order to have a long-lasting effect?

A

It should be done in dividing cells that are renewing the cell population in certain tissues or generation the whole body (gametes)

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14
Q

Give an example of how a gene can be delivered into the body in gene therapy

A

Through the use of vector (virus, retrovirus etc.) - vectors are used for delivery of genes into specific types of cells e.g. bone marrow

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15
Q

What is meant by ‘in vivo’ gene therapy?

A

When the therapeutic agent is put directly into the body

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16
Q

What is meant by ‘ex vivo gene therapy?

A

When the relevant cells are isolated & replaced/modified to put back into the patient

17
Q

What can gene therapy be used for?

A

It has great potential in treating disorders traceable to a single defective gene; potentially for customised medicine