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Biochemical and Molecular Methods
 Hybridization techniques allow identification of
  specific macromolecules, e.g. proteins, and
  DNA or RNA sequences based on ability of NA
  to bind specifically to labeled, known, single-
  stranded NA sequences.
 Separation methods employed range from
  enzyme digestion, chromatography,
  electrophoresis or centrifugation.
 Using restriction endonucleases which cleave
  DNA at specific sequences, recombinant DNA
  and other facets of biotechnology are benefited
  by these methods.
 Wait until next semester for this…
Nucleic Acid Hybridization. (A) If the DNA helix is separated into 2 strands,
   the strands should reanneal, given the appropriate ionic conditions and
time. (B) If DNA is separated into its 2 strands, RNA should be able to bind to
 the genes that encode it. If present in sufficiently large amounts compared
  with the DNA, the RNA will replace one of the DNA strands in this region.
Combined with reporter molecules, hybridization enables
cytogeneticists to create probes to detect, quantify, visualize DNA/RNA
  location, and monitor their activity in a given cell/ tissue of interest.
Construction of a human
    genomic DNA library. A
   genomic library is usually
  stored as a set of bacteria,
   each bacterium carrying a
 different fragment of human
 DNA. The entire collection of
clones derived from one mRNA
          preparation
  constitutes a cDNA library.
 Because the cells of different
 tissues produce distinct sets
of mRNA molecules, a distinct
  cDNA library is obtained for
    each type of cell used to
      prepare the library.
       http://highered.mcgraw-
  hill.com/olc/dl/120078/bio_h.swf
The synthesis of cDNA.
Total mRNA is extracted from a
  particular tissue. The enzyme
reverse transcriptase produces
    DNA copies (cDNA) of the
    mRNA molecules. A short
complement to the poly-A tail at
 the 3' end of the mRNA acts as
      a primer for the reverse
    transcriptase, which then
       copies the RNA into a
   complementary DNA chain,
   thereby forming a DNA/RNA
       hybrid helix. Treating
     the DNA/RNA hybrid with
RNaseH creates nicks and gaps
  in the RNA. DNA polymerase
used to synthesize the 2nd DNA
  strand synthesize the bound
    RNA molecule, resulting to
  sequences at the 5„ end to be
   absent from cDNA libraries.
Gene A is infrequently
The differences between cDNA clones    transcribed compared to
and genomic DNA clones derived from      gene B. In the genomic
       the same region of DNA.            DNA library, both the
                                         introns (green) and the
                                           nontranscribed DNA
                                       (pink) are included in the
                                           clones. Most clones
                                        contain only part of the
                                          coding sequence of a
                                        gene (red). In the cDNA
                                             clones, the intron
                                       sequences (yellow) have
                                          been removed by RNA
                                            splicing during the
                                         formation of the mRNA
                                      (blue). Because gene B is
                                             transcribed more
                                       frequently than gene A in
                                        the cells from which the
                                      cDNA library was made, it
                                      is represented much more
                                        frequently than A in the
                                       cDNA library. In contrast,
                                        A and B are in principle
                                      represented equally in the
                                          genomic DNA library.
Preparation of a bacteriophage λ cDNA
   library. A mixture of mRNAs is isolated
          and used to produce cDNAs
  corresponding to all the cellular mRNAs
 (1–3). These single-stranded cDNAs (light
   green) are then converted into double-
     stranded cDNAs, which are treated
       with EcoRI methylase to prevent
subsequent digestion by EcoRI (4 –6 ). The
   protected double-stranded cDNAs are
         ligated to a synthetic double-
   stranded EcoRI-site linker at both ends
 and then cleaved with the corresponding
  restriction enzyme, yielding cDNAs with
      sticky ends (red letters); these are
incorporated into λ phage cloning vectors,
   and the resulting recombinant λ virions
  are plated on a lawn of E. coli cells (7–9 )
            http://highered.mcgraw-
      hill.com/olc/dl/120078/micro10.swf
Phage cDNA libraries can
      be screened with a
radiolabeled probe to identify a
       clone of interest.
  The appearance of a spot on the
    autoradiogram indicates the
presence of a recombinant clone
containing DNA complementary to
the probe. The position of the spot
     on the autoradiogram is the
mirror image of the position on the
      original petri dish of that
    particular clone. Aligning the
  autoradiogram with the original
      petri dish will locate the
  corresponding clone from which
 infectious phage particles can be
   recovered and replated at low
density, resulting in well-separated
 plaques. Pure isolates eventually
   are obtained by repeating the
         hybridization assay.
Use of PCR to obtain a    (A) PCR primers that flank the
                          stretch of DNA to be cloned are
genomic or cDNA clone.    added to purified chromosomal
                           DNA, and many PCR cycles of
                           are completed. Since only the
                             DNA between the primers is
                           amplified, PCR provides a way
                             to obtain a short stretch of
                           chromosomal DNA selectively
                           in a virtually pure form. (B) To
                              use PCR to obtain a cDNA
                           clone of a gene, mRNA is first
                             purified from cells. The first
                             primer is then added to the
                              population of mRNAs, and
                            reverse transcriptase is used
                          to make a complementary DNA
                               strand. The 2nd primer is
                          added, and the single-stranded
                             cDNA molecule is amplified
                           through many PCR cycles. For
                              both types of cloning, the
                          nucleotide sequence of at least
                           part of the region to be cloned
                             must be known beforehand.
Cloning genomic DNA by the PCR technique. Each cycle of the reaction
  begins with a brief heat treatment to separate the two strands (aka,
heat cycler). Hybridization to complementary sequences in the two DNA
strands take place to produce 4 dsDNA molecules, and the 5-min. cycle
is repeated 20-30x to produce amplified DNA copies. Trace amounts of
  RNA can be analyzed in the same way by first transcribing them into
                    DNA with reverse transcriptase.
......geneticsvideos       http://highered.mcgraw-
          pcr.exe             hill.com/olc/dl/120078/m
                                       icro15.swf.

  A PCR reaction using 2 primers that bracket a particular
 microsatellite, or VNTR sequence, produces a different pair
 of DNA bands from each individual. Each band represents
   VNTR sequences inherited from the mother and father.
      Although some individuals have several bands in
  common, the overall pattern is quite distinctive for each.
The PCR cloning                            Bands obtained from a set
  technique has                              of PCR reactions which
 largely replaced                            amplifies different VNTR
Southern blotting                           sequences, can serve as
for the diagnosis                           a "fingerprint" to identify
    of genetic                                 each individual. The
 diseases and for                            starting material for the
 the detection of                             PCR reaction can be a
low levels of viral                         single hair or blood left at
     infection.                                  the crime scene.
       http://highered.mcgraw-hill.com/olc/dl/120078/bio20.swf
Methods for mRNA
 Isolate populations of mRNA that
  characterize certain cell types and are
  absent in all others
 Determine the temporal and spatial locations
  of RNA expression
1.Northern blot- extract total mRNA from the
  specimen and separate it by electrophoresis.
 Bands produced are complementary mRNA
  to the probe, and intensity of bands are
  proportional to amount of specific mRNA.
Northern blotting.
2.Ribonuclease protection
  32Plabeled probe is hybridized in
solution with total RNA from specimen
Hybrids are digested with ribonucleases
 (double-stranded ones will be protected
             from digestion)
        The mixture is separated
          on a sequencing gel
    Visualized radioactivity reveals a
  range of intensity proportional to the
 content of specific RNA in the sample.
3.Reverse-transcription polymerase chain
               reaction (RT-PCR)
     Total RNA from sample is reverse-transcribed
        into cDNA using reverse transcriptase.

      Two oligonucleotides are added, chosen to
     correspond to sequences in the target cDNA.

   The sequence between the primers is amplified by
repeated cycles of synthesis, melting and hybridization.

        The reaction mixture is run on a gel and the
        DNA bands are visualized in the usual way.

      The intensity of bands bears some relation to
        the initial amount of mRNA in the sample.
Methods for DNA
1.In situ hybridization- designed to reveal the
  spatial domains of gene expression in a
  specimen.
 An antisense probe is synthesized in vitro
  complementary to the mRNA to be detected.
  This is hybridized to the specimen and then
  visualized.
 Probes usually include extra chemical groups
  recognizable by a commercially available
  antibody for detection (e.g. digoxigenein or DIG,
  a plant sterol)
 Radioactive probes are used in radioactive in
  situ hybridization (RISH), fluorescent dyes are
  used in FISH.
Fluorescence In Situ
Hybridization (FISH)
 begins with a DNA
 probe and a target
sequence. The DNA
 probe is labeled by
   indirect labeling
    (left) and direct
labeling (right). The
 labeled probe and
 the target DNA are
 denatured to yield
    single stranded
DNA. They are then
  combined, which
allows the annealing
 of complementary
  DNA sequences.
In situ hybridization performed on a whole chick
     embryo that have been fixed without being
 sectioned. The probe used recognizes the mRNA
 encoding Pax6 in the chick embryo. This probe is
 labeled not with a radioactive isotope, but with a
modified UTP. To create this probe, a region of the
   cloned Pax6 gene was transcribed into mRNA,
 containing UTP conjugated with digoxigenin. This
  does not interfere with the coding properties of
the resulting mRNA, but does make it recognizably
       different from any other RNA in the cell.
2.Southern blot- to evaluate DNA extracts
  from tissue samples.
 This is a type of nucleic acid hybridization
  test in which single-stranded DNA from two
  sources interact.
 Strands with similar nucleic acid sequences
  will anneal by base pairing (A with T, and G
  with C) to form double-stranded molecules.
 One of the single-stranded DNA molecules
  is a unique portion of the gene of interest,
  and is radioactively labeled so it can be
  detected on photographic film (the probe).
   http://highered.mcgraw-hill.com/olc/dl/120078/bio_g.swf
Southern blotting. (1) DNA is treated with restriction
  enzymes, and the resulting restriction fragments of DNA
   are placed in a gel. (2) After the fragments of DNA are
    separated on the gel by electrophoresis, the DNA is
  denatured into single strands. (3) The gel is then placed
  on a support on top of a filter paper saturated with high-
ionic-strength buffer. Nitrocellulose paper or a nylon filter
 is placed on the gel, and towels are placed atop the filter.
     The transfer buffer makes its way through the gel,
    nitrocellulose paper, and towels by capillary action,
     taking the DNA with it. The single-stranded DNA is
stopped by the nitrocellulose paper. (4) Blot is incubated
  with radioactive or fluorescent probes in sealed bag. (5)
 The positions of the DNA in the paper directly reflect the
         positions of the DNA fragments in the gel.
*Blue dress of White House employee Monica Wilson
stained with semen of former US President Bill Clinton!
Southern blots (zoo blots) of various organisms. DNA using a
radioactive probe from the Antennapedia gene of Drosophila melanogaster.
Autoradiography shows that Drosophila genes contain several portions that
 are like Antennapedia genes in structure and that many organisms contain
several genes that will hybridize this radioactive gene fragment, suggesting
that Antennapedia-like genes exist in these organisms. The numbers beside
                the blots indicate size of bands, in kilobases.
3.MICROARRAYS provide a means to measure &
 monitor the expression of thousands of genes at once




      http://highered.mcgraw-        .......geneticsvideosdnaarray.exe
hill.com/olc/dl/120078/micro50.swf
DNA microarray analysis
   can reveal differences in
   gene expression in yeast
       cells under different
   experimental conditions.
  cDNA prepared from mRNA
      isolated from wild-type
Saccharomyces cells grown on
 glucose or ethanol is labeled
with different fluorescent dyes.
 If a spot is        , expression
   of that gene is the same in
 cells grown either on glucose
 or ethanol. If a spot is       ,
    expression of that gene is
     greater in cells grown in
     glucose. If a spot is    ,
    expression of that gene is
     greater in cells grown in
              ethanol.
3. GENE TARGETING (KNOCK-OUT) EXPERIMENTS-
   wild type alleles are replaced with mutant ones.
   There are 2 types of mutations used in these
   experiments:
   a. Loss of function mutation- protein product of the
      mutant gene is less active than the wild type
   b. Gain of function mutation- mutant gene interferes
      with the function of the wild-type form (mutant
      can cause receptor activation in the absence of a
      ligand-receptor complex, or a mutant
      transcription factor may be active all the time and
      not respond to
      regulation)
METHODS OF RECOMBINANT DNA
               TECHNOLOGY
 Knowledge of the molecular biology of cells
makes it possible to experimentally move from
  gene to protein and from protein to gene!




     http://highered.mcgraw-hill.com/olc/dl/120078/bio38.swf
1. Bacterial plasmids are small, circular, self-
   replicating, extra-chromosomal DNA pieces that can
   be altered in vitro by inserting or deleting specific
   sequences, using restriction endonucleases.
 Because they can be used to create clones of genes,
  plasmids are called CLONING VECTORS.
                                  http://highered.mcgraw-
                            hill.com/olc/dl/120078/bio37.swf.
                         ......geneticsvideosrestriction.exe
Transfection-
   cells are
 incubated in
 solution that
 makes them
   “drink” in
 cloned DNA
usually mixed
with antibiotic
  resistance
     genes
Electropo
  lation-
   high-
 voltage
   pulse
“pushes”
    the
 cloned
DNA into
    cell
 Microinjection- cloned gene in
  solution is injected into the cell
  nucleus. The DNA is injected into
  the fertilized ovum before the
  male and female pronuclei have
  fused, increasing the probability
  that all of the cells of the
  organism will harbor the gene.
 A “gene gun” is also used which
  fires plastic bullets filled with
  DNA-coated metallic pellets.
  Some may penetrate the nuclei
  of cells, where the introduced
  DNA integrates into the DNA of
  the recipient‟s genome.
 Transposable element or retroviral vector-
  cloned DNA is inserted into mobile regions of
  DNA that has the ability to integrate
  themselves into the genome of an organism.
 Known as
  jumping
  genes since
  they can
  move about
  on the
  chromosome
  or among
  chromosomes.
Transgenic mice are
     produced by random
integration of a foreign gene
  into the mouse germ line.
  Foreign DNA injected into
one of the two pronuclei (the
   male and female haploid
   nuclei contributed by the
 parents) has a good chance
of being randomly integrated
into the chromosomes of the
  diploid zygote. Because a
 transgene is integrated into
the recipient genome by non-
 homologous recombination,
       it does not disrupt
      endogenous genes.
 After birth, tissue samples of the young are assessed for
  the presence of the desired gene. DNA from germ line
  cells is given special attention.
 If the novel gene is present in these cells, the animal and
  its stem cells can be used as a founder for breeding.
 Such animal models allow researchers to test
  therapeutic compounds and study the molecular basis of
  given diseases.
 Mouse disease models now exist for cystic fibrosis, beta-
  thalassemia, atherosclerosis, retinoblastoma, and
  Duchenne muscular dystrophy.
 Somatic cells may also be grown in cell culture and
  genetically modified by fusion with the enucleated egg.
 With donor DNA for cloning derived from cultured
  recombinant cells, it becomes possible to carry out
  specific genetic modifications and introduce the
  modified genes into animals and plants.
Isolating embryonic stem (ES) cells and incorporating them
into recipient embryos resulting into cells of different genetic
  constitution appearing in the same organism (chimera). ES
 cells treated as transgenics have been useful in determining
    how genes are regulated during development of mice.
 To analyze the role of BMP7 in
  development, a bacterial gene for
  neomycin resistance is inserted into
  BMP7, destroying its ability to
  function.
 The mutant BMP7 genes are inserted
  into neomycin sensitive ES cells,
  heterozygous ES cells are then
  microinjected into mouse blastocysts,
  resulting to chimeras which are then
  mated to wild-type mice.
 Heterozygous mice are inbred,
  producing mutant mice which lacked
  eyes and kidneys.
In the absence of the BMP7 protein, cells that
form the eyes & kidneys stop dividing and die.




 Gene targeting makes transgenic mice that are
missing specific genes. In this way gene targeting
  can be used to analyze the roles of particular
     genes during mammalian development.
        .......geneticsvideosgene targeting.exe
Today,
 transgenics are
becoming such a
     common
    commodity.
 GMO technology
  comes up with
   new wonders
  every now and
   then, it is not
surprising to have
  one of these in
    the future!
4. ANTI- SENSE RNA-
   interrupts translation
   of mRNA to protein by
   introducing single
   strands of RNA
   targeted to bind with
   the mRNA
 Generated by cloning
   DNA into vectors with
   promoters at both ends
   of the inserted gene.
 When incubated with
   RNA polymerase and NTPs, the promoter will transcribe the
   message in the wrong direction.
 Transgenic tomatoes have been constructed that carry in
   their genome an artificial gene that is transcribed into an
   antisense RNA complementary to the mRNA for an enzyme
   involved in ethylene production. These tomatoes make only
   10% of the normal amount of the enzyme.
The double-stranded
   RNA molecules are
recognized by an RNase
and degraded into short
       fragments.

This antisense RNA will
bind to a normal cellular
    message. mRNA
 produced by this gene
 will also be degraded.

 RNA-dependent RNA
polymerase can amplify
these fragments, which
 can be transmitted to
    progeny cells.
 Results are similar to
knock-out experiments
where the expression of
   a cellular gene is
experimentally shut off.
http://www.dnalc.org/resources
/animations/cloning101.html

http://www.dnalc.org/resources
/animations/gelelectrophoresis.
html

http://www.dnalc.org/resources
/animations/pcr.html

http://learn.genetics.utah.edu/c
ontent/labs/extraction/

http://learn.genetics.utah.edu/c
ontent/labs/microarray/

http://www.dnalc.org/resources
/animations/dnaarray.html

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Manipulating nucleic acids

  • 1.
  • 2. Biochemical and Molecular Methods  Hybridization techniques allow identification of specific macromolecules, e.g. proteins, and DNA or RNA sequences based on ability of NA to bind specifically to labeled, known, single- stranded NA sequences.  Separation methods employed range from enzyme digestion, chromatography, electrophoresis or centrifugation.  Using restriction endonucleases which cleave DNA at specific sequences, recombinant DNA and other facets of biotechnology are benefited by these methods.  Wait until next semester for this…
  • 3. Nucleic Acid Hybridization. (A) If the DNA helix is separated into 2 strands, the strands should reanneal, given the appropriate ionic conditions and time. (B) If DNA is separated into its 2 strands, RNA should be able to bind to the genes that encode it. If present in sufficiently large amounts compared with the DNA, the RNA will replace one of the DNA strands in this region.
  • 4. Combined with reporter molecules, hybridization enables cytogeneticists to create probes to detect, quantify, visualize DNA/RNA location, and monitor their activity in a given cell/ tissue of interest.
  • 5. Construction of a human genomic DNA library. A genomic library is usually stored as a set of bacteria, each bacterium carrying a different fragment of human DNA. The entire collection of clones derived from one mRNA preparation constitutes a cDNA library. Because the cells of different tissues produce distinct sets of mRNA molecules, a distinct cDNA library is obtained for each type of cell used to prepare the library. http://highered.mcgraw- hill.com/olc/dl/120078/bio_h.swf
  • 6. The synthesis of cDNA. Total mRNA is extracted from a particular tissue. The enzyme reverse transcriptase produces DNA copies (cDNA) of the mRNA molecules. A short complement to the poly-A tail at the 3' end of the mRNA acts as a primer for the reverse transcriptase, which then copies the RNA into a complementary DNA chain, thereby forming a DNA/RNA hybrid helix. Treating the DNA/RNA hybrid with RNaseH creates nicks and gaps in the RNA. DNA polymerase used to synthesize the 2nd DNA strand synthesize the bound RNA molecule, resulting to sequences at the 5„ end to be absent from cDNA libraries.
  • 7. Gene A is infrequently The differences between cDNA clones transcribed compared to and genomic DNA clones derived from gene B. In the genomic the same region of DNA. DNA library, both the introns (green) and the nontranscribed DNA (pink) are included in the clones. Most clones contain only part of the coding sequence of a gene (red). In the cDNA clones, the intron sequences (yellow) have been removed by RNA splicing during the formation of the mRNA (blue). Because gene B is transcribed more frequently than gene A in the cells from which the cDNA library was made, it is represented much more frequently than A in the cDNA library. In contrast, A and B are in principle represented equally in the genomic DNA library.
  • 8. Preparation of a bacteriophage λ cDNA library. A mixture of mRNAs is isolated and used to produce cDNAs corresponding to all the cellular mRNAs (1–3). These single-stranded cDNAs (light green) are then converted into double- stranded cDNAs, which are treated with EcoRI methylase to prevent subsequent digestion by EcoRI (4 –6 ). The protected double-stranded cDNAs are ligated to a synthetic double- stranded EcoRI-site linker at both ends and then cleaved with the corresponding restriction enzyme, yielding cDNAs with sticky ends (red letters); these are incorporated into λ phage cloning vectors, and the resulting recombinant λ virions are plated on a lawn of E. coli cells (7–9 ) http://highered.mcgraw- hill.com/olc/dl/120078/micro10.swf
  • 9. Phage cDNA libraries can be screened with a radiolabeled probe to identify a clone of interest. The appearance of a spot on the autoradiogram indicates the presence of a recombinant clone containing DNA complementary to the probe. The position of the spot on the autoradiogram is the mirror image of the position on the original petri dish of that particular clone. Aligning the autoradiogram with the original petri dish will locate the corresponding clone from which infectious phage particles can be recovered and replated at low density, resulting in well-separated plaques. Pure isolates eventually are obtained by repeating the hybridization assay.
  • 10. Use of PCR to obtain a (A) PCR primers that flank the stretch of DNA to be cloned are genomic or cDNA clone. added to purified chromosomal DNA, and many PCR cycles of are completed. Since only the DNA between the primers is amplified, PCR provides a way to obtain a short stretch of chromosomal DNA selectively in a virtually pure form. (B) To use PCR to obtain a cDNA clone of a gene, mRNA is first purified from cells. The first primer is then added to the population of mRNAs, and reverse transcriptase is used to make a complementary DNA strand. The 2nd primer is added, and the single-stranded cDNA molecule is amplified through many PCR cycles. For both types of cloning, the nucleotide sequence of at least part of the region to be cloned must be known beforehand.
  • 11. Cloning genomic DNA by the PCR technique. Each cycle of the reaction begins with a brief heat treatment to separate the two strands (aka, heat cycler). Hybridization to complementary sequences in the two DNA strands take place to produce 4 dsDNA molecules, and the 5-min. cycle is repeated 20-30x to produce amplified DNA copies. Trace amounts of RNA can be analyzed in the same way by first transcribing them into DNA with reverse transcriptase.
  • 12. ......geneticsvideos http://highered.mcgraw- pcr.exe hill.com/olc/dl/120078/m icro15.swf. A PCR reaction using 2 primers that bracket a particular microsatellite, or VNTR sequence, produces a different pair of DNA bands from each individual. Each band represents VNTR sequences inherited from the mother and father. Although some individuals have several bands in common, the overall pattern is quite distinctive for each.
  • 13. The PCR cloning Bands obtained from a set technique has of PCR reactions which largely replaced amplifies different VNTR Southern blotting sequences, can serve as for the diagnosis a "fingerprint" to identify of genetic each individual. The diseases and for starting material for the the detection of PCR reaction can be a low levels of viral single hair or blood left at infection. the crime scene. http://highered.mcgraw-hill.com/olc/dl/120078/bio20.swf
  • 14.
  • 15. Methods for mRNA  Isolate populations of mRNA that characterize certain cell types and are absent in all others  Determine the temporal and spatial locations of RNA expression 1.Northern blot- extract total mRNA from the specimen and separate it by electrophoresis.  Bands produced are complementary mRNA to the probe, and intensity of bands are proportional to amount of specific mRNA.
  • 17. 2.Ribonuclease protection 32Plabeled probe is hybridized in solution with total RNA from specimen Hybrids are digested with ribonucleases (double-stranded ones will be protected from digestion) The mixture is separated on a sequencing gel Visualized radioactivity reveals a range of intensity proportional to the content of specific RNA in the sample.
  • 18. 3.Reverse-transcription polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) Total RNA from sample is reverse-transcribed into cDNA using reverse transcriptase. Two oligonucleotides are added, chosen to correspond to sequences in the target cDNA. The sequence between the primers is amplified by repeated cycles of synthesis, melting and hybridization. The reaction mixture is run on a gel and the DNA bands are visualized in the usual way. The intensity of bands bears some relation to the initial amount of mRNA in the sample.
  • 19. Methods for DNA 1.In situ hybridization- designed to reveal the spatial domains of gene expression in a specimen.  An antisense probe is synthesized in vitro complementary to the mRNA to be detected. This is hybridized to the specimen and then visualized.  Probes usually include extra chemical groups recognizable by a commercially available antibody for detection (e.g. digoxigenein or DIG, a plant sterol)  Radioactive probes are used in radioactive in situ hybridization (RISH), fluorescent dyes are used in FISH.
  • 20. Fluorescence In Situ Hybridization (FISH) begins with a DNA probe and a target sequence. The DNA probe is labeled by indirect labeling (left) and direct labeling (right). The labeled probe and the target DNA are denatured to yield single stranded DNA. They are then combined, which allows the annealing of complementary DNA sequences.
  • 21. In situ hybridization performed on a whole chick embryo that have been fixed without being sectioned. The probe used recognizes the mRNA encoding Pax6 in the chick embryo. This probe is labeled not with a radioactive isotope, but with a modified UTP. To create this probe, a region of the cloned Pax6 gene was transcribed into mRNA, containing UTP conjugated with digoxigenin. This does not interfere with the coding properties of the resulting mRNA, but does make it recognizably different from any other RNA in the cell.
  • 22. 2.Southern blot- to evaluate DNA extracts from tissue samples.  This is a type of nucleic acid hybridization test in which single-stranded DNA from two sources interact.  Strands with similar nucleic acid sequences will anneal by base pairing (A with T, and G with C) to form double-stranded molecules.  One of the single-stranded DNA molecules is a unique portion of the gene of interest, and is radioactively labeled so it can be detected on photographic film (the probe). http://highered.mcgraw-hill.com/olc/dl/120078/bio_g.swf
  • 23. Southern blotting. (1) DNA is treated with restriction enzymes, and the resulting restriction fragments of DNA are placed in a gel. (2) After the fragments of DNA are separated on the gel by electrophoresis, the DNA is denatured into single strands. (3) The gel is then placed on a support on top of a filter paper saturated with high- ionic-strength buffer. Nitrocellulose paper or a nylon filter is placed on the gel, and towels are placed atop the filter. The transfer buffer makes its way through the gel, nitrocellulose paper, and towels by capillary action, taking the DNA with it. The single-stranded DNA is stopped by the nitrocellulose paper. (4) Blot is incubated with radioactive or fluorescent probes in sealed bag. (5) The positions of the DNA in the paper directly reflect the positions of the DNA fragments in the gel.
  • 24. *Blue dress of White House employee Monica Wilson stained with semen of former US President Bill Clinton!
  • 25. Southern blots (zoo blots) of various organisms. DNA using a radioactive probe from the Antennapedia gene of Drosophila melanogaster. Autoradiography shows that Drosophila genes contain several portions that are like Antennapedia genes in structure and that many organisms contain several genes that will hybridize this radioactive gene fragment, suggesting that Antennapedia-like genes exist in these organisms. The numbers beside the blots indicate size of bands, in kilobases.
  • 26. 3.MICROARRAYS provide a means to measure & monitor the expression of thousands of genes at once http://highered.mcgraw- .......geneticsvideosdnaarray.exe hill.com/olc/dl/120078/micro50.swf
  • 27. DNA microarray analysis can reveal differences in gene expression in yeast cells under different experimental conditions. cDNA prepared from mRNA isolated from wild-type Saccharomyces cells grown on glucose or ethanol is labeled with different fluorescent dyes. If a spot is , expression of that gene is the same in cells grown either on glucose or ethanol. If a spot is , expression of that gene is greater in cells grown in glucose. If a spot is , expression of that gene is greater in cells grown in ethanol.
  • 28. 3. GENE TARGETING (KNOCK-OUT) EXPERIMENTS- wild type alleles are replaced with mutant ones. There are 2 types of mutations used in these experiments: a. Loss of function mutation- protein product of the mutant gene is less active than the wild type b. Gain of function mutation- mutant gene interferes with the function of the wild-type form (mutant can cause receptor activation in the absence of a ligand-receptor complex, or a mutant transcription factor may be active all the time and not respond to regulation)
  • 29.
  • 30. METHODS OF RECOMBINANT DNA TECHNOLOGY Knowledge of the molecular biology of cells makes it possible to experimentally move from gene to protein and from protein to gene! http://highered.mcgraw-hill.com/olc/dl/120078/bio38.swf
  • 31. 1. Bacterial plasmids are small, circular, self- replicating, extra-chromosomal DNA pieces that can be altered in vitro by inserting or deleting specific sequences, using restriction endonucleases.  Because they can be used to create clones of genes, plasmids are called CLONING VECTORS. http://highered.mcgraw- hill.com/olc/dl/120078/bio37.swf. ......geneticsvideosrestriction.exe
  • 32. Transfection- cells are incubated in solution that makes them “drink” in cloned DNA usually mixed with antibiotic resistance genes
  • 33. Electropo lation- high- voltage pulse “pushes” the cloned DNA into cell
  • 34.  Microinjection- cloned gene in solution is injected into the cell nucleus. The DNA is injected into the fertilized ovum before the male and female pronuclei have fused, increasing the probability that all of the cells of the organism will harbor the gene.  A “gene gun” is also used which fires plastic bullets filled with DNA-coated metallic pellets. Some may penetrate the nuclei of cells, where the introduced DNA integrates into the DNA of the recipient‟s genome.
  • 35.  Transposable element or retroviral vector- cloned DNA is inserted into mobile regions of DNA that has the ability to integrate themselves into the genome of an organism.  Known as jumping genes since they can move about on the chromosome or among chromosomes.
  • 36. Transgenic mice are produced by random integration of a foreign gene into the mouse germ line. Foreign DNA injected into one of the two pronuclei (the male and female haploid nuclei contributed by the parents) has a good chance of being randomly integrated into the chromosomes of the diploid zygote. Because a transgene is integrated into the recipient genome by non- homologous recombination, it does not disrupt endogenous genes.
  • 37.  After birth, tissue samples of the young are assessed for the presence of the desired gene. DNA from germ line cells is given special attention.  If the novel gene is present in these cells, the animal and its stem cells can be used as a founder for breeding.  Such animal models allow researchers to test therapeutic compounds and study the molecular basis of given diseases.  Mouse disease models now exist for cystic fibrosis, beta- thalassemia, atherosclerosis, retinoblastoma, and Duchenne muscular dystrophy.  Somatic cells may also be grown in cell culture and genetically modified by fusion with the enucleated egg.  With donor DNA for cloning derived from cultured recombinant cells, it becomes possible to carry out specific genetic modifications and introduce the modified genes into animals and plants.
  • 38. Isolating embryonic stem (ES) cells and incorporating them into recipient embryos resulting into cells of different genetic constitution appearing in the same organism (chimera). ES cells treated as transgenics have been useful in determining how genes are regulated during development of mice.
  • 39.  To analyze the role of BMP7 in development, a bacterial gene for neomycin resistance is inserted into BMP7, destroying its ability to function.  The mutant BMP7 genes are inserted into neomycin sensitive ES cells, heterozygous ES cells are then microinjected into mouse blastocysts, resulting to chimeras which are then mated to wild-type mice.  Heterozygous mice are inbred, producing mutant mice which lacked eyes and kidneys.
  • 40. In the absence of the BMP7 protein, cells that form the eyes & kidneys stop dividing and die. Gene targeting makes transgenic mice that are missing specific genes. In this way gene targeting can be used to analyze the roles of particular genes during mammalian development. .......geneticsvideosgene targeting.exe
  • 41. Today, transgenics are becoming such a common commodity. GMO technology comes up with new wonders every now and then, it is not surprising to have one of these in the future!
  • 42. 4. ANTI- SENSE RNA- interrupts translation of mRNA to protein by introducing single strands of RNA targeted to bind with the mRNA  Generated by cloning DNA into vectors with promoters at both ends of the inserted gene.  When incubated with RNA polymerase and NTPs, the promoter will transcribe the message in the wrong direction.  Transgenic tomatoes have been constructed that carry in their genome an artificial gene that is transcribed into an antisense RNA complementary to the mRNA for an enzyme involved in ethylene production. These tomatoes make only 10% of the normal amount of the enzyme.
  • 43. The double-stranded RNA molecules are recognized by an RNase and degraded into short fragments. This antisense RNA will bind to a normal cellular message. mRNA produced by this gene will also be degraded. RNA-dependent RNA polymerase can amplify these fragments, which can be transmitted to progeny cells. Results are similar to knock-out experiments where the expression of a cellular gene is experimentally shut off.
  • 44.
  • 45.

Notas do Editor

  1. Separating DNA strands for hybridization with cDNA or RNA
  2. Uses of hybridization