660 likes | 1.15k Views
2. Kary Mullis, after winning Nobel Prize for inventing PCR. www.palamito.it/fotopalfiles . 3. PCR: Polymerase Chain Reaction.
E N D
1. 1 Molecular Biology Materials & Methods 5:
PCR and DNA Markers
2. 2
3. 3 PCR: Polymerase Chain Reaction “Amplify” DNA by in-vitro (in plastico) synthesis
Key requirements:
enzyme: Taq DNA polymerase, not denatured at high temps used to denature DNA
primers: short (~ 20 b) oligonucleotides bind to denatured DNA, required to start DNA synthesis
4. 4
5. 5
6. 6
7. 7
8. 8
9. 9
10. 10
11. 11
12. 12
13. 13
14. 14
15. 15
16. 16
17. 17
18. 18 PCR: polymerase chain reaction Advantages:
powerful: works with miniscule amounts of DNA (even single cells)
highly specific targets
many primers work with broad range of targets (plants, animals, fungi)
adapted to simplify DNA sequencing
Disadvantages:
difficulty / expense of primer development
troubleshooting when reactions fail
19. 19
20. 20
21. 21
22. 22 Thermosequencing: dideoxy sequencing + PCR Recall fundamental step of Sanger sequencing is enzymatic replication of DNA
PCR using only one primer, plus different fluorescent nucleotides for each of 4 ddNTP reactions, produces copies of one strand
Time-consuming steps of digestion & cloning in M13 can be avoided
23. 23 PCR anthem from Bio-Rad http://www.cnpg.com/video/redirect.aspx?redirectid=65
24. 24 RFLPs: Restriction Fragment Length Polymorphisms “Restriction” enzymes digest DNA by cutting only at specific sequences (typically 6 bp palindromes)
Named because they restrict the entry of foreign (e.g. viral) DNA into bacteria, by shredding it
25. 25
26. 26
27. 27
28. 28
29. 29
30. 30
31. 31 VNTRs – DNA fingerprints A kind of RFLP: combines restriction digest & probing
Detects “variable number of tandem repeats” polymorphism
32. 32
33. 33
34. 34
35. 35
36. 36
37. 37 VNTR fingerprints Advantages:
Low development cost: probes work on most taxa (plants and animals)
Highly polymorphic
Disadvantages:
Bands “anonymous”: can’t determine how many loci or alleles are present
Mostly forensic applications
Comparisons among a small & defined set of related individuals
38. 38 RAPDs: Randomly Amplified Polymorphic DNA PCR using short (10 b) primers
Short primers bind to many sites scattered throughout the genome
because the
39. 39
40. 40
41. 41
42. 42
43. 43
44. 44
45. 45 RAPDs: Randomly Amplified Polymorphic DNAs Advantages:
Modest development cost
Low application cost
High polymorphism
Modest database for comparison
Disadvantages:
Bands dominant & anonymous: can’t recognize alleles for a locus
Generally not comparable among labs
46. 46 AFLPs: Amplification Fragment Length Polymorphisms Combines RFLPs + PCR
47. 47
48. 48
49. 49
50. 50
51. 51
52. 52
53. 53 AFLPs: Amplification Fragment Length Polymorphisms Advantages:
Moderate development cost
Highly polymorphic
Disadvantages
Anonymous bands (can’t tell loci from alleles)
Dominant (complex & uncertain genetics)
Rather expensive (multiple restrictions plus PCR plus capillary electrophoresis)
54. 54 Microsatellites / SSRs: simple sequence repeats PCR-based assay for very small VNTRs
Amplify using one of:
radiolabeled nucleotides
fluorophore-labeled nucleotides
fluorophore-labeled primers
55. 55
56. 56
57. 57
58. 58
59. 59
60. 60
61. 61 SSR Advantages Defined loci
Defined alleles
capillary eph gives < 0.5 b resolution
Robust amplification targets
Codominant !!
Highly polymorphic
62. 62 SSR Disadvantages Primer development takes lots of work
digest, clone, probe, sequence, design primer
Primers not broadly applicable across taxa
usually work within genera (plants)
Fluorescent primers are expensive
63. 63
64. 64
65. 65