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UV IRRADIATION, SURVIVAL CURVE AND REPAIR MECHANISM

UV IRRADIATION, SURVIVAL CURVE AND REPAIR MECHANISM. GENE367 MOLECULAR GENETICS LABORATORY BEGÜM TUNCER 07/10/2009. http://waterecotechnology.com. Cells and nucleic acids absorb UV 260 nm is absoption peak of DNA Pyrimidine dimers (T-T, C-C, T-C) can be formed after UV exposure

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UV IRRADIATION, SURVIVAL CURVE AND REPAIR MECHANISM

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  1. UV IRRADIATION, SURVIVAL CURVE AND REPAIR MECHANISM GENE367 MOLECULAR GENETICS LABORATORY BEGÜM TUNCER 07/10/2009

  2. http://waterecotechnology.com

  3. Cells and nucleic acids absorb UV • 260 nm is absoption peak of DNA • Pyrimidine dimers (T-T, C-C, T-C) can be formed after UV exposure • Repair mechanisms may remove these dimers • Mutations and/or DNA replication inhibition are possible

  4. Repair Mechanisms • Photoreactivation • Excision Repair • Recombinational repair • SOS Repair

  5. Photoreactivation (Light Repair) • In E.coli an enzyme called photoreactivating enzyme (PRE) is produced • Binds to dimers, to seperate them to monomers. • Only active after immediate exposure to visible light after UV light.

  6. http://trishul.sci.gu.edu.au

  7. Excision Repair (Dark Repair) • uvrA, uvrB, and uvrC genes are responsible for excision repair in E.coli http://www.phys.ksu.edu/gene

  8. Recombinational Repair (Postreplicational Repair) • recA gene is responsible for strand exchange for recombinational repair.

  9. http://www.mun.ca/biochem

  10. SOS Repair • The SOS repair system is induced in response to major damage to the bacterial DNA or in response to agents which inhibit DNA replication. • The system is a complex one with over 20 genes involved. Two of these are the important regulator genes: lexA and recA.

  11. Bacterial Growth • Aseptic techniques • Culture techniques: spread plate • Dilutions • Measurement of growth: viable count

  12. Dilutions • To count the individual cells/colonies dilution is necessary. • Serial dilutions can be performed either tenfold or hundred fold. • Ex: 1 mL of bacterial culture in 100 mL solution makes 10-2 dilution. DF=102

  13. E.coli colonies on a petri plate

  14. Calculation of colony forming units cfu/mL = number of colonies x Dilution factor x 1/V

  15. Procedure • Grow 10 mL of E.coli/ B. subtilis cells o/n at 37 C • Centrifuge at 5000 rpm for 15 min. • Discard supernatant and resuspend the pellet in 10 mL 0.85% saline solution. • Pour it into a sterile petri plate. • Take 0.1 mL aliquot from sampling plate and dilute according to the table

  16. Procedure • Label LB petri plates: Group, Date, Time, Strain, Dilution. • Spread the diluted samples onto LB agar plates (only “0 min”). • Put the Sample plate under UV light and expose to UV for 30 seconds. • Dilute the samples according to table. • Spread the diluted samples on LB agar plates (only “30 sec”). • Repeat the UV exposure for 1, 3, 5, and 10 min exposures by adding up the time required. • Repeat dilutions and spreading. • Incubate your plates at 37 C for 24 hours.

  17. Next week • Count colonies on plates. • Calculate log number of survivors. • Plot a curve for comparison of E.coli vs B. Subtilis bacterial strains.

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