1 / 37

TECHNIQUES INVOVED IN PROTEOMICS,GENOMICS,TRANSCRIPTOMICS…….

TECHNIQUES INVOVED IN PROTEOMICS,GENOMICS,TRANSCRIPTOMICS……. AIN US SABA 15. OUTLINE. BASIC PRINCIPLE OF ALL OMICs GENOMICS TRANSCRIPTOMICS PROTEOMICS METABLOMICS APPLICATIONS CONCLUSION. BASIC PRINCIPLE OF OMICS. GENOMICS.

lavender
Download Presentation

TECHNIQUES INVOVED IN PROTEOMICS,GENOMICS,TRANSCRIPTOMICS…….

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. TECHNIQUES INVOVED IN PROTEOMICS,GENOMICS,TRANSCRIPTOMICS……. AIN US SABA 15

  2. OUTLINE • BASIC PRINCIPLE OF ALL OMICs • GENOMICS • TRANSCRIPTOMICS • PROTEOMICS • METABLOMICS • APPLICATIONS • CONCLUSION

  3. BASIC PRINCIPLE OF OMICS

  4. GENOMICS • The actual term 'genomics' is thought to have been coined by Dr. Tom Roderick • Genomics is • study of the genomes of organisms. • determine • the entire DNA sequence of organisms • fine-scale genetic mapping • studies of intragenomic phenomena • aim of this genetic • pathway • functional information analysis response to the entire genome's networks

  5. HISTORY • The first genomes to be sequenced, a virus and a mitochondrion, and were done by Fred Sanger. • In 1972, Walter Fiers and his team were the first to determine the gene for Bacteriophage MS2 coat protein. • The first free-living organism to be sequenced was that of Haemophilus influenzae (1.8 Mb) in 1995 • As of September 2007, the complete sequence was known of about • 1879 viruses • 577 bacterial • 23 eukaryote • A rough draft of the human genome was completed by the Human Genome Project in early 2001

  6. Whole genome sequencing • cutting the chromosomes into large pieces,physical mapping • Several copies of the genome are randomly cut into pieces • Each fragments is inserted into a BAC-a bacterial artificial chromosome. • These pieces are fingerprinted to give each piece a unique identification tag that determines the order of the fragments. • Making M13 library &sequencing • These sequences are fed into PHRAP that looks for common sequences that join two fragments together. • Multiple copies of the genome are randomly shredded into pieces • Each 2,000 and 10,000 bp fragment is inserted into a plasmid • Both the 2,000 and the 10,000 bp plasmid libraries are sequenced. • Computer algorithms assemble the millions of sequenced fragments into a continuous stretch resembling each chromosome. BAC to BAC Sequencing Shotgun Sequencing

  7. Trancriptomics • The transcriptome is the set of all RNA molecules, including mRNA, rRNA, tRNA, and other non-coding RNA produced in one or a population of cells. • Study of transcriptome is called transcriptomics. • Techniques • Expression profiling • DNA microarrays • SAGE(serial analysis of gene expression)

  8. PROTEOMICS • The term "proteomics“ • was first coined in 1997 • to make an analogy with genomics • "proteome" is a blend of "protein" and "genome“ • coined by Marc Wilkins in 1994 • Proteomics is the large-scale study of proteins •  structures  • functions.

  9. PROTEOME • Theproteome  • is the entire complement of proteins •  including the modifications made to a particular set of proteins • This will vary with • time • distinct requirements • or stresses, that a cell or organism undergoes.

  10. COMPLEXITY OF PROBLEM • proteomics is considered the next step in the study of biological systems. • It is much more complicated than genomics • organism's genome is more or less constant •  proteome differs from cell to cell and from time to time. • done by mRNA analysis, • correlate with protein content • now known that mRNA is not always translated into protein • SO,Proteomicsconfirms the presence of the protein and provides a direct measure of the quantity present. • PTM

  11. Protein Chemistry Assay Techniques • Affinity capture • Phosphorylation • Protein Binding • Receptors • Complexes • Mass Spectrometry • Accurate molecular weight • Gel Electrophoresis • Isoelectric point • Molecular weight • Liquid Chromatography • Fluorescence • Staining

  12. TECHNIQUES • develop an antibody which is specific to that modification. • For glycosylation lectins • two-dimensional gel electrophoresis“ •  PROTOMAP which combines •  SDS-PAGE with shotgun proteomics

  13. AFFINITY CAPTURE • Antibodies are adding to the protein mixture • Antibodies bind to proteins that have modified • Proteins of interest can be separated based on the modification.

  14. 2D Gel-Electrophoresis • Protein separation • Molecular weight (Mw) • Isoelectric point (pI) • Staining • Birds-eye view of protein abundance

  15. PROTOMAP • PRoteinTOpography and Migration Analysis Platform • Is combination of • SDS-PAGE with shotgun proteomics • is performed by • resolving control and experimental samples in separate lanes of a 1D SDS-PAGE gel • proteins in these bands are sequenced using shotgun proteomics. • Sequence information from all of these bands are bioinformatically integrated into a visual format called a peptograph • which plots gel-migration in the vertical dimension (high- to low-molecular weight, top to bottom) • sequence coverage in the horizontal dimension (N- to C-terminus, left to right).

  16. Sample + _ Detector Ionizer Mass Analyzer Mass Spectrometer ElectronMultiplier(EM) Time-Of-Flight (TOF) Quadrapole Ion-Trap MALDI Electro-SprayIonization (ESI)

  17. Enzymatic Digest and Fractionation LC/MS for Peptide Abundance

  18. Liquid Chromatography LC/MS for Peptide Abundance Mass Spectrometry LC/MS: 1 MS spectrum every 1-2 seconds

  19. The NMR Spectrometer =>

  20. METABLOMICS • Newborn cousin to genomics and proteomics • study of chemical processes involving metabolites. • "systematic study of the unique chemical fingerprints that specific cellular processes leave behind • The metabolome • represents the collection of all metabolites in a biological cell, tissue, organ or organism, which are the end products of cellular processes • metabolic profiling can give an instantaneous snapshot of the physiology of that cell.

  21. HISTORY • In 2005, first metabolite database(called METLIN) • In January 2007, scientists at the University of Alberta and the University of Calgary completed the first draft of the human metabolome. • They catalogued approximately • 2500 metabolites, • 1200 drugs • 3500 food components • This information, available at the Human Metabolome Database • www.hmdb.ca • over 50,000 metabolites have been characterized from the plant kingdom

  22. APPLICATIONS • Toxicology • Nutrition • Medical profiling • Pharmacology • Diagnostics……….

  23. CONCLUSION • High-dimensional biology (HDB) refers to the simultaneous study in health and disease • The fundamental premise is that the evolutionary complexity of biological systems renders them difficult to comprehensively understand using only a reductionist approach. • Such complexity can become tractable with the use of "omics" research. • This term refers to the study of entities in aggregate. • The two major advances that have made HDB possible are technological breakthroughs that allow simultaneous examination of thousands of genes, transcripts, and proteins, etc., with high-throughput techniques and analytical tools to extract information.

More Related