Jones - Biological Techniques Flashcards
how do phage insert their genomic DNA into a host?
Phage lambda inserts its genomic DNA into a bacterial cell eg E. coli
The complementary cos sites circularise
The Att site on the circular phage lambda DNA attaches to the Att site on the E. coli genome
Recombination of phage lambda and E. coli genome
(looks like a little loop-the-loop on DNA)
which enzyme is responsible for joining the cos sites in phage DNA?
DNA ligase
describe both steps of ligation, include a brief description of the enzymatic mechanism
1st step (non-enzymatic):
DNA has to collide by chance and stay together long enough for ligase to join them.
This is the most inefficient part and requires a low temperature
2nd step (enzymatic):
Lysine residue in ligase adds an adenylate (AMP) group to the PO4- group
The 3’ OH group attacks the PO4- group and forms a phosphodiester bond
DNA ligase requires ATP as a cofactor
what is the optimal temperature for DNA ligation?
16oC is the optimal temperature for this; compromise between enzymatic temperature (25oC) and DNA collision temperature. A higher temperature would mean the collisions would be too brief for ligase to join the phosphodiester bonds
which 2 scientists discovered restriction and modification in phage?
Salvadore Luria and Werner Arber
define restriction and modification
restriction: the ability for host bacteria to degrade foreign phage DNA, means phage can’t enter new bacterium easily
modification: the ability for phage to enter new bacterium after adopting their methylation pattern
briefly describe the differences and uses of the type I and III, and type II restriction endonucleases
Type I and III:
Cleave DNA sites away from recognition sequences
Not used in most molecular biology applications
Type II:
Cleave both DNA strands at specific recognition site
Most abundant form
Widely used in molecular biology
describe the nomenclature of restriction enzymes
First 3 letter of name is an abbreviation of the bacteria it was obtained from
4th letter is the strain of bacteria
Number is the type of enzyme used
how do restriction enzymes cleave DNA?
Initial binding is loose and doesn’t involve catalytic activity
- If it reaches its recognition site then it binds
- If it doesn’t find its recognition site after 50 bp then it hops/jumps along DNA
Once it’s bound to its recognition site it, and the DNA, undergo conformational changes
The catalytic component becomes activated, and in the presence of Mg2+ the enzyme cleaves both strands by breaking the phosphodiester bonds
what is molecular cloning?
Creation of recombinant DNA molecules and their replication in a host organism
describe the difference in transformation and transfection
Transformation: recombinant molecule in bacteria
Transfection: recombinant molecule in animal cell
describe in brief the steps in molecular cloning
Restriction enzymes produce fragment, can be purified by gel electrophoresis
Fragment ligated into open plasmid
New recombinant molecule is transferred into a cell
Host cell replicates itself – plasmids can be harvested
name 3 types of vector
plasmid
phage
cosmid
state when and why plasmids, phages and cosmids are used in molecular cloning
Plasmid:
- Naturally occurring multicopy (makes multiple copies)
- =<10kb insert maximum
- subcloning and downstream manipulation, cDNA cloning and expression assays
Phage:
- Bacteriophage λ
- 5-20kb insert maximum
- Genomic DNA cloning, cDNA cloning and expression
Cosmid:
- Plasmid containing a bacteriophage λ cos site (uses the bacteriophage method of gene insertion but no bacteriophage cell lysis)
- 34-45kb insert maximum
- Genomic library construction
name 3 essential components of a cloning vector that mean it can be used in molecular cloning
A selectable marker (ie a resistance gene)
Restriction sites to clone the fragment in
Own origin of replication