1 / 25

Plasmids circular pieces of”extrachromosomal” DNA propagated inside host

Plasmids circular pieces of”extrachromosomal” DNA propagated inside host have origin of replication -> ensures host will copy it. Plasmids circular pieces of”extrachromosomal” DNA propagated inside host have origin of replication -> ensures host will copy it Have selectable marker

agatha
Download Presentation

Plasmids circular pieces of”extrachromosomal” DNA propagated inside host

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Plasmids • circular pieces of”extrachromosomal” DNA propagated inside host • have origin of replication • -> ensures host will copy it

  2. Plasmids • circular pieces of”extrachromosomal” DNA propagated inside host • have origin of replication • -> ensures host will copy it • Have selectable marker • (usually a drug-resistance • gene) • -> ensures cell won’t • “lose” it

  3. Plasmids • circular pieces of”extrachromosomal” DNA propagated inside host • have origin of replication • -> ensures host will copy it • Have selectable marker • (usually a drug-resistance • gene) • -> ensures cell won’t • “lose” it • pGLO also carries • gene for Jellyfish • Green Fluorescent Protein

  4. Restriction Enzymes • enzymes which cut DNA • at specific sites

  5. Restriction Enzymes • enzymes which cut DNA • at specific sites • called "restriction enzymes" • because restrict host range for • certain bacteriophage

  6. Restriction Enzymes • enzymes which cut DNA • at specific sites • called "restriction enzymes" • because restrict host range for • certain bacteriophage • bacterial” immune system”: • destroy any “non-self” DNA

  7. Restriction Enzymes • bacterial” immune system” destroy “non-self”DNA • -> methylase recognizes same sequence in host DNA and protects it by methylating it

  8. Restriction Enzymes enzymes which cut DNA at specific sites Useful for fingerprinting: each cuts a particular DNA into a distinctive set of fragments

  9. Restriction Enzymes enzymes which cut DNA at specific sites Useful for fingerprinting: each cuts a particular DNA into a distinctive set of fragments

  10. Restriction Enzymes enzymes which cut DNA at specific sites Useful for fingerprinting: each cuts a particular DNA into a distinctive set of fragments can map each site by double digests

  11. Restriction Enzymes Restriction enzymes create unpaired "sticky ends” which anneal with anycomplementary sequence

  12. Restriction Enzymes • Restriction enzymes • create unpaired "sticky • ends” which anneal with • anycomplementary • sequence • make “recombinant • DNA” by mixing 2 • different fragments • digested with same • enzyme and gluing • them together with ligase

  13. Restriction Enzymes • Restriction enzymes • create unpaired "sticky • ends” which anneal with • anycomplementary • sequence • make “recombinant • DNA” by mixing 2 • different fragments • digested with same • enzyme and gluing • them together with ligase • Genetic Engineering

  14. Restriction mapping

  15. Restriction mapping

  16. Transformation Physical transfer of new DNA into cell 1. Preincubation: chills cells, allows cations to neutralize negative charges on plasma membrane.

  17. Transformation 1. Preincubation: chills cells, allows cations to neutralize negative charges on plasma membrane. 2. Incubation: allows DNA to diffuse through cell wall to contact plasma membrane.

  18. Transformation 2. Incubation: allows DNA to diffuse through cell wall to contact plasma membrane. 3. Heat shock: opens holes in plasma membrane, allows plasmid to enter by diffusion.

  19. Transformation 3. Heat shock: opens holes in plasma membrane, allows plasmid to enter by diffusion. 4. Recovery: cells must make proteins encoded by new DNA molecule before they can be plated.

  20. Transformation 5. Selecting transformants: cells which have taken up the plasmid are only ones which can grow in the presence of ampicillin. Form colony at place they landed on plate

  21. DNA fingerprinting Use DNA sequences that vary between individuals

  22. DNA fingerprinting Use DNA sequences that vary between individuals

  23. DNA fingerprinting Use DNA sequences that vary between individuals Microsatellites short sequences 2-5 bases long repeated multiple times

  24. DNA fingerprinting • Microsatellites • short sequences 2-5 bases long repeated multiple times • vary between families but not within families

  25. DNA fingerprinting • STRs (simple tandem repeats) • vary between families but not within families • Detect by PCR with primers that bind outside repeat

More Related