L9 - Isolation of DNA & genes Flashcards

1
Q

Why would we want to isolate DNA?

A

For genetic manipulations

For DNA analysis 
– Scientific 
– Medical 
– Forensic 
– Ecological 
– Archaeological
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2
Q

Steps of DNA isolation?

A
  1. Cell lysis
  2. DNA purification from the cell extract
  3. Concentrate DNA
  4. Measurement of DNA purity & concentration
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3
Q

What is cell lysis?

A

Release the DNA from the cell by breaking down its cell membrane

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4
Q

3 methods of cell lysis

A

Biological methods
Physical methods
Mechanical methods

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5
Q

Biological methods of cell lysis

A

Use enzymes to disrupt cell membranes – different enzymes for different cells

Plants = cellulase
Bacteria = lysozyme
Eukaryotic cells = sappanin

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6
Q

Physical methods of cell lysis

A

Osmotic pressure – excess water moves into the cell when cells are placed in hypotonic solution
Messy – isn’t really a technique we want to use

Freeze-Thaw – repeated cycles of freezing & thawing ruptures the cell membranes through ice crystal formation

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7
Q

Mechanical methods of cell lysis

A

Grinding

Shearing

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8
Q

Grinding as a mechanical methods of cell lysis

A

Pestle & mortar – used to disrupt plant cells & hard tissue

Bead mill – used to beat & grind tough samples

Vortex – used with beads or by itself for small cell numbers

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9
Q

Shearing as a mechanical methods of cell lysis

A

Homogeniser – cell or tissue suspensions are forced through a narrow space causing cells to lyse

Rotor-Stator – uses a combination of turbulence & mechanical shearing

Syringe-needed – purification of longer DNA fragments

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10
Q

DNA purification by Phenol-Chloroform extraction

A

Lysed cells or tissue are mixed with equal volumes of a Phenol-Chloroform mixture

Centrifugation = 2 distinct phases as the Phenol:Chloroform mixture doesn’t mix with water
– Aqueous layer = buffer & DNA

DNA concentration – 0.3M Sodium Acetate & 2.5 volumes Ethanol can be used to precipitate DNA from salt & sugar to concentrate it

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11
Q

DNA purification by Phenol-Chloroform extraction

CONS

A

Don’t want to inhale chloroform

Phenol can cause serious chemical burns

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12
Q

DNA purification using commercial kits

A

Column contains a silica membrane that binds DNA in the presence of a high concentration of salt

1) When DNA added to high salt conc buffer, DNA will bind to the silica membrane
2) Everything else filtered out by centrifugation
3) Wash it with ethanol to cleanse all impurities from the DNA
4) Need to elute DNA from the silica membrane
5) low salt buffer such as water or 10mM Tris-Cl, pH 8.5 is used to release the DNA from the membrane & collect it

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13
Q

DNA purification using commercial kits VS DNA purification by Phenol-Chloroform extraction

A

Using these kits is not as hazardous, is less time consuming & results in purer DNA than phenol-chloroform extraction

More expensive & can only use small volumes

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14
Q

What are restriction endonucleases?

A

They are molecular scissors that cut DNA at precise locations

Restriction = act on specific DNA sequences ‘restriction sites’
Endonucleases = cleave the phosphodiester bind within a polynucleotide 

There are over 3000 different ones

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15
Q

What are restriction endonucleases used for in the lab?

A

To make recombinant DNA molecules – cloning

To cut DNA into defined fragments – DNA fingerprinting & mutation analysis

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16
Q

How do restriction enzymes cut DNA?

A

Make 1 cut in each of the sugar phosphate backbones of the double helix (breaks bond between 3’ O & P) at their recognition site in the presence of Mg2+
– Hydrolyses the phosphate group
– Cut ends have a 5’ phosphate

17
Q

Naming convention for restriction enzymes

A

Named for bacterial genus, species, strain & type

Example: EcoRI
• Genus: Escherichia
• Species: coli
• Strain: R
• Type: I
18
Q

Different types of restriction endonucleases

A

Recognition sites for restriction enzymes are often palindromes

Palindromes are the same forwards & backwards

Blunt ends – cuts in half through both DNA strands – no overhanging sections

Sticky ends – creates overhangs at each end that can stick to complementary sequences

19
Q

What enzymes are needed to stick strands back together?

A

Ligase

20
Q

What is star activity?

A

When it starts to cut the DNA up everywhere – relaxation or alteration of the specificity – non-canonical site cleavage

When reaction conditions differ significantly from the optimum for the enzyme

21
Q

What is electrophoresis?

A

Migration and separation of charged particles (ions) under the influence of an electric field

Separates DNA fragments

22
Q

Agarose in electrophoresis gels

A

Agarose is from seaweed

Forms a molecular sieve in the gel

The higher the concentration the smaller the pores – harder for the DNA to get through

23
Q

Electrophoresis method

A

DNA is negatively charged so migrates to the anode (positive electrode)

Smaller DNA fragments migrate quicker

Visualise results with intercalating dyes

Always run with a ladder so you know the molecular weights of the fragments

Graph of log DNA size of the markers by distance migrated creates a straight line

Can then plot the distance the product of interest has travelled on the line & estimate the DNA size