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Lecture 2: Biology Review II. Date: 8/29/02 Overview/Review of: Mapping Molecular techniques Markers. Genetic Mapping. Definition: A genetic map is an ordering of genes and markers in a linear arrangement corresponding to their physical order along the chromosome. Based on linkage .
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Lecture 2: Biology Review II Date: 8/29/02 Overview/Review of: Mapping Molecular techniques Markers
Genetic Mapping • Definition: A genetic map is an ordering of genes and markers in a linear arrangement corresponding to their physical order along the chromosome. Based on linkage. • Definition: A physical map is an ordering of landmarks on DNA, regardless of inheritance. Measured in base pairs.
Marker • Definition: A marker is a gene or piece of DNA with easily identified phenotype such that cells or individuals with different alleles are distinguishable. • e.g. a gene with known function • e.g. a single nucleotide change in DNA
Polymorphism • Definition: A polymorphism is a detectable and heritable variation at a locus. • Definition: A marker is polymorphic if the most abundant allele comprises less than X% of all alleles, usually 95%. • Definition: A mapping population is a population used to map genes.
Natural Populations • Definition:Natural populations are those where mating is not controlled by the experimenter, though the experimenter can choose who to observe. • Only phenotype observable, genotype sometimes unknown, phase is unknown. • Knowns: allele frequencies, genotype frequencies, amount of disequilibrium.
Hardy-Weinberg Equilibrium I • Refers to the equilibrium achieved at a single locus. • Hardy-Weinberg Equilibrium (HWE) is achieved when the allele frequencies and genotype frequencies do not change from generation to generation.
Hardy-Weinberg Equilibrium II • Let pAand pB be the frequencies of allele A and B in the population. Let pAAbe the frequency of genotype AA. Similarly, pAB and pBB are genotype frequencies. • Then HWE implies that pAA = pA2 pAB = 2pApB pBB = pB2
Measures of Polymorphism P(heterozygote) = Definition: Polymorphism Information Content (PIC)
½ are informative informative uninformative Uninformative Matings AB X AB 1 AA : 2 AB : 1 BB
Classical Linkage Analysis • A few markers. • Must have detectable variation. • Must be substantially variable in study population. • Controlled crosses: testcross, backcross, double- haploid • Well-defined parental lines.
Three-Point Testcross Design dominant recessive testcross X X F1 F2 A S Y A S Y b t z b t z A S Y b t z b t z b t z b t z b S z X X
Three-Point Testcross Results • Count the number of recombinant haplotypes produced by F1 parent. Calculate the recombinant fraction for each pair of genes.
Map for Three-Point Testcross 3 2 1 0.03 0.15 0.19
Backcross Design new recombinant self self F2 no more changes
Large-Scale Mapping • Many genetic markers • Steps of analysis: • pairwise linkage analysis • group into linkage groups • order markers in each linkage group
Comparative Mapping • Compare maps of different species. • Due to similarities, information can be transferred between species. • Information about how genomes evolve. • Uses conserved loci rather than highly variable loci.
Molecular Techniques: probes 5’ – …AAGCCTAGAGCCCTTAGCCAAAAG… – 3’ 3’ – …TTCGGATCTCGGGAATCGGTTTTC… – 5’ denature add probe 3’ – *ATCTCGGGAATC – 5’ hybridization 5’ – …AAGCCTAGAGCCCTTAGCCAAAAG… – 3’ *ATCTCGGGAATC
Molecular Techniques: restriction enzymes Definition: An endonuclease is an enzyme (protein that acts as a catalyst to speed up the rate of a biochemical reaction) that cleaves nucleic acid strands at internal sites (phosphodiester bond). Definition: A restriction endonuclease is an enzyme that cuts DNA at specific sites that it recognizes. EcoRI 5’ GAATTC 3’ 3’ CTTAAG 5’ number of cut sites = N/4b
Molecular Techniques: gel electrophoresis • DNA is negatively charged. Proteins can also be charged. • An electric current is passed through a porous medium (agarose, acrylamide) and molecules in the medium respond by moving in electric field, but at different rates based on size and charge.
5’ 5’ 5’ 5’ Molecular Technique: PCR I 5’ 5’ Denaturation and hybridization Elongation & denaturation
Physical Maps • Banding patterns on chromosomes • In-situ hybridization • Denature metaphase chromosomes • Add radioactive or fluorescent probe • Visualize chromosomes • DNA fragmentation • DNA sequence: still not practical for all organisms
DNA Fragmentation • Larger fragments better (rare cutters; partial digestion) • Find overlap by sequencing or hybridization.
DNA Vector I • Definition: A cloning vector is a DNA molecule that is capable of self-replicating. Insert the fragment of foreign DNA to make recombinant DNA.
DNA Vector II • phage: virus that infects bacteria (5-25 kb). • cosmid: Packaged in lambda phage and infects E. coli (35-45 kb). • yeast artificial chromosome (YAC): has telemere, centromere, and replication origin (200-2000 kb). • bacterial artificial chromosome (BAC) • plasmid: extrachromosomal circular DNA nonessential for cell survival.
How Many Clones? Let N be the number of clones made. Let NSbe the number of nonoverlapping clones needed to cover the full genome. More: M. S. Waterman Introduction to Computational Biology: Maps, Sequences, and Genomes
Genetic Mapping Still Needed • Even if the full sequence is known, mapping is still necessary. • There must be some way to correlate a trait/phenotype with something on the sequence.
Physical Mapping Still Needed • Linkage maps lack resolution • Sample more people • Better statistics • Let recombination accumulate over many generations. • Even with most precise linkage map can identify a gene to 1 cM (1 Mb in humans).
Morphological Markers • Differences in shape, color, size, etc. • Must have one-to-one correspondence with a controlling gene.
Protein Markers • Definition: An isozyme are proteins with same enzymatic function but different structural, chemical, or immunological characteristics. • Differences: amino acid composition, size, modifications (e.g. phosphorylation). • Differences visualized: gel electrophoresis, mass spectrometry, etc.
DNA Marker: RFLP I • Definition: RFLP is Restriction Fragment Length Polymorphism. • DNA digested with endonuclease. • Separate fragments by electrophoresis. • Denature strands. • Transfer single-stranded DNA to durable membrane and immobilize (Southern blot). • Hybridize labeled probe to the blot. • Visualize probe.
DNA Marker: RFLP II • DNA polymorphisms that RFLP identifies: • mutation in the restriction site • mutation elsewhere to create restriction site • insertion/deletion of DNA • RFLP markers are codominant
Mini- and Micro-Satellite Markers • Definition:minisatellites or VNTR (Variable Number of Tandem Repeats) are tandem repeates of sequences 9-100 bp long. Detected by hybridization or PCR. • Definition:microsatellites or SSR (Simple Sequence Repeat) are direct tandem repeated sequences of DNA of 1-6 bp.
STS and EST • Definition:Sequence tagged sites (STS) is a short unique fragment of DNA. • Definition:Expressed sequence tags (EST) are subsets of STSs from cDNA clones. Represent transcribed genes (e.g. usually proteins).
Single-Strand Conformational Polymorphism (SSCP) • Detects changes as small as 1 nucleotide in more than 1000 bp. • Single-stranded DNA is electrophoresed on gel and migrates based on size and shape. • Visualized by Southern blot with specific fragment probe or PCR specific fragment and visualize directly.
Random Amplified Polymorphic DNA (RAPD) • PCR with short probes that bind randomly to sites in the genome. • Good for genomes where little sequence information is available. • Band-present is dominant. • Expected number of products = 2fN/16b
Amplified Fragment Length Polymorphism (AFLP) • Cut DNA with frequent- and rare-cutting endonuclease • Anneal adapters to the ends of the frequent-cutter cut sites. • Amplify off adapters with PCR. Use various specific primers to amplify subsets of total. • Visualize on denaturing polyacrylamide gel.
Choosing Markers • High polymorphism. • Clear interpretation. • Quick typing and easy automation. • Personal preference.