Lab 1 - Laboratory Practices and Data Mining Flashcards
Explain the biological function of the enzyme PTEN in mammalian systems
The PTEN gene provides instructions for making an enzyme that is found in almost all tissues in the body. The enzyme acts as a tumor suppressor, which means that it helps regulate cell division by keeping cells from growing and dividing (proliferating) too rapidly or in an uncontrolled way.
How did cutting edge technology like biotechnology fundamentally change societies?
Through the capacity to provide important benefits of health, the environment, and economics
In particular, what is this lab simulating?
The initial characterization of a tumour suppressor enzyme using various biotechnology approaches
What tumour suppressor enzyme will we be studying?
Phosphatase and Tensin Homolog Deleted on Chromosome 10 (PTEN)
When was the PTEN gene isolated?
During a screen for deleted genes in cancers that were located on the frequently mutated chromosome 10
What advanced cancers has PTEN been shown to be mutated in?
Breast, brain, prostate, and kidney
What will be the focus of this laboratory?
The protein sequence analysis of the gene
What will be the focus of the laboratories for the remainder of the semester?
The initial characterization of the PTEN protein
In this lab, the bioinformatics databases contained on what will be used?
The National Centre for Biotechnology Information’s servers (NCBI)
When was NCBI established? By who? For what purpose?
In 1988 by the US government as a national resource for molecular biology information
What does the NCBI currently do?
- Creates public databases
- Conducts research in computational biology
- Develops software tools for analyzing genome data
- Disseminates biomedical information with the goal of increasing the level of understanding associated with molecular processes that impact human health and disease
What is an effective method for analyzing protein sequences?
Examine conserved domains between a protein of interest and group of protein homologs
What is a conserved domain (CD)?
A region within a protein sequence that demonstrates a statistically significant correlation with a region on a different protein
What about CDs can be determined by comparative analysis?
Recurring units in polypeptide chains (sequence and structure motifs)
How can molecular evolution use CDs?
As building blocks which may be recombined in different arrangements to make different proteins with different functions
By using CDs, what can we learn about PTEN?
- The function of the enzyme
- Locate functional domains
- Establish evolutionary relationships across protein families
- Interpret mutation studies
- Make predictions on the structure of a protein of unknown structure
What does the conserved domain database (CDD) contain?
Sequence alignments that define the features that are conserved within each domain family
What does the CDD serve as?
A classification resource that groups proteins based on the presence of these predefined domains
What do CDD entries often give?
The name of the domain family and a description of the role of conserved residues in binding or catalysis
What are CDs displayed in and what do they link to?
MMDB structure summaries and link to a sequence alignment showing other proteins in which the domain is conserved, which may provide clues on protein function
How is CD-Search designed to interact with the NCBI databases?
To perform multiple sequence alignments and detailed statistical analysis using the BLAST software suite - an NCBI search algorithm
How does CD-Search use BLAST statistics?
Evaluates the statistical significance of query - subject alignments and returns E-values (expectation values), which can be used in your analysis
What does the CD-Search using BLAST statistics database program report?
A graphical summary of each search, a list of hits (matches), and a pair wise alignment between your query and the conserved domains of other proteins
What is Ensembl?
A joint project between EMBL-EBI and the Sanger Institute to develop a software system which produces and maintains automatic annotation on selected eukaryotic genomes