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CHAPTER SIX Nucleic acid hybridization: principles and applications. 생물정보학협동과정 강민호. Nucleic Acid Hybridization.
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CHAPTER SIXNucleic acid hybridization: principles and applications 생물정보학협동과정 강민호
Nucleic Acid Hybridization • Nucleic acid hybridization is a fundamental tool in molecular genetics which takes advantage of the ability of individual single-stranded nucleic acid molecules to form double stranded molecules (that is, tohybridize to each other)
Standard nucleic acid hybridization assays • A labeled nucleic acid - a probe - to identify • related DNA or RNA molecules • Complex mixture of unlabeled nucleic acid • molecules- the target • Base complementarity with a high degree of • similarity between the probe and the target.
Probes • DNA labelling • 5’ • 3’ • Uniform labeling • Nick translation • Random primer • PCR-mediated labeling • RNA labelling • In vitro transcription of a cloned DNA insert • Different probes • Radioactive labeling or isotopic labeling • Nonradioactive labeling or nonisotopic labeling
Characteristics of radioisotopes commonly used for labeling DNA and RNA probes Radioisotope Half-life Decay-type Energy of emission 3H 12.4 years b- 0.019 MeV 32P 14.3 days b- 1.710 MeV 33P 25.5 days b- 0.248 MeV 35S 87.4 days b- 0.167 MeV
Nonisotopic labeling and detection • The use of nonradioactive labels has several advantages: • safety • higher stability of a probe • efficiency of the labeling reaction • detection in situ • less time taken to detect signal • Major types • Direct nonisotopic labeling (ex. nt labeled with a fluorophore) • Indirect nonisotopic labeling (ex. biotin.-streptavidin system)
Structure of fluorophores Fluorescence microscopy Common Fluorophores
Structure of digoxigenin-modified and biotin-modified nucleotides
Denaturation of DNA results in an increase of optical density
Factors affecting Tm of nucleic acid hybrids • Destabilizing agents (ex. formamide, urea) • Ionic strenght • Base composition (G/C%, repetitive DNA) • Mismatched base pairs • Duplex lenght Different equations for calculating Tm for: • DNA-DNA hybrids • DNA-RNA hybrids • RNA-RNA hybrids • Oligonucleotide probes
Stringency High temperature Low salt concentration High denaturant concentration Sequence lenght Tm High strigency Perfect match non-complementary sequences Perfect match complementary sequences Sequence G/C content Low strigency Low temperature High salt concentration Low denaturant concentration
The identification of specific sequences in a complex mixture.
Filter hybridization methods Bacteriophage blotting Benton-Davis Filter hybridization techniques Bacterial colony blotting Grunstein-Hogness Slot/Dot blotting Northern analysis Southern analysis
Filters or Membranes • Nitrocellulose • Nylon • Positive charged nylon (hybond) • PVDF (hydrophobic polyvinylidene difloride) • Different properties: • Binding capacity (mg nucleic acids/cm2) • Tensile strenght • Mode of nucleic acid attachment • Lower size limit for efficient nucleic acid retention
In situ hybridization • Chromosome in situ hybridization • Metaphase or protometaphase chromosomes are probed with labeled DNA . The DNA can be labeled with a fluorochrome (FISH). • Tissue in situ hybridization • Sliced or whole mounted preparations can be probed with RNA probes to detect mRNA expression
Summary I • Hybridization is due to complementarity of DNA strands. • DNA can be labeled various ways • Isotopic and non isotopic • Hybridization can detect identical or similar sequences.
Summary II • A variety of techniques utilize hybridization of DNA or RNA probes • ASO • Southern Blot, RFLP, VNTRs, Mutation detection, deletion detection • Northern Blot, tissue specific expression • In situ hybridization • Chromosome location and integrity • Tissue specific expression
Summary III • Colony hybridization can be used to identify specific clones. Once you have one clone you can find others that hybridize to it. • Screening of gridded clones . One can identify genomic clones homologous to a cDNA or identify cDNA expressed in a cell line. • Microarrays can be used in many ways to analyze gene expression in various cell types, in response to various stimuli.