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Explore the fascinating world of genetic engineering and recombinant DNA technology, from isolating DNA to creating genetically modified organisms. Learn about the applications of PCR, DNA cloning, and gene expression. Discover how these advancements have revolutionized fields such as medicine and forensic science.
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Manipulating Genes and Cells Chapter 10
In the early 1970s, it became possible, for the first time, to isolate a given piece of DNA out of the many millions of nucleotide pairs in a typical chromosome. • This in turns made it possible to generate new DNA molecules in the test tube and to introduce this genetic materials back into living organisms. • These developments, called “recombinant DNA,” “gene splicing,” or “genetic engineering” make it possible to create chromosomes with combination of genes that that could never have formed naturally–or combinations of genes that could conceivably occur in nature but might take thousands of years of chance events to come together.
Humans have been experimenting with DNA, albeit without realizing it for millennia. 10_01_experiment.DNA .jpg wild rose → modern garden rose gray wolf → modern dog
10_02_cell_sorter.jpg fluorescence-activated cell sorter to obtain a uniform population of cells
in vitro, in vivo • in vitro: literally, “in glass” • in vivo: literally, “in the living” • experiments performed using cultured cells are sometimes said to be carried out in vitroto contrast them with experiments on intact organisms, which are said to be carried out in vivo *be often used in a very different sense by biochemists. • in vitro: reactions carried out in a test tube in the absence of cells • in vivo:reactions taking place inside a living cell p. 325
10_03_Cells_origin.jpg oligodendrocytes fibroblasts myoblasts • primary culture • cell line: (immortalized) • embryonic stem (ES) cell lines: (undifferentiated) Tobacco cells
Restriction (endo)nucleases 10_04_Restrict.nuclease.jpg blunt end • sticky end • protruding end • cohesive end
Ethidium bromomide (EtBr) Sypro green, yellow,… 10_05_gel.electrophor.jpg • physical map • restriction map
10_06_budding.yeast.S.jpg The complete nucleotide sequence of the budding yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae was finished in 1996.
DNA sequencing: dideoxy method 10_07_1_enzym.dideoxy.jpg dideoxy method In vitro DNA polymerization chain-terminating by dideoxyribonucleoside triphosphate
10_07_2_enzym.dideoxy.jpg denature acrylamide gel
Automated sequencing 10_08_DNA.sequencing .jpg genome sequencing → prediction ORFs (genes) →annotation → identification
Sequencing the human genome 10_09_Shotgun.sequenc.jpg shotgun sequencing
clone-by-clone 10_11_BAC.clones.jpg “fingerprints” 100 to 200 kbp cloned into BAC
10_12_de_renaturation.jpg (hybridization) DNA/DNA; RNA/RNA; RNA/DNA Probe: 10- 1000 nt long
Human sickle-cell anemia, point mutation, recessive mutation 10_13_hybridization.jpg probe length hybridization temperature
Southern blotting- • DNA/DNA • Northern blotting- • DNA (RNA)/RNA • Western blotting- • protein/protein (Ab/Ag)
10_15_DNA.microarrays .jpg (dot blot hybridization)
10_16_In.situ.hybrdztn.jpg metaphase chromose 5 (Fluoresence) in situ hybridization (FISH)
10_17_mRNA.in.situ.jpg in situ hybridization of cyclin expression cyclin: a protein triggers the cell to divide
DNA cloning • the act of making many identical copies of a DNA molecule • the separation of a particular stretch of DNA (gene) from the rest of a cells DNA • one of the most important feats of recombinant DNA technology
10_19_DNA.uptake.jpg other bacterial cells that have died transformation
10_20_Bacteria.plasmid.jpg • ds DNA • containing ori • carrying genes that render their host bacteria resistant to antibiotics (selectable porperty) • having cutting sites for restriction nucleases plasmid: carrier, vector
DNA cloning 10_21_DNA ligase.jpg
10_23_genomic.library.jpg DNA library
10_24_hybridization.jpg colony hybridization
10_27_1_PCR_amplify.jpg PCR (polymerase chain reaction) denaturation annealing extension
PCR: in vitro DNA replication 10_27_2_PCR_amplify.jpg 2n The key of PCR: thermal stable DNA polymerase
Applications of PCR • The method of choice for cloning specific DNA fragments • Detection of infections by pathogens at very early stages (for many infections, PCR is the most sensitive method of detection) • Having great potential in forensic medicine
DNA/gene cloning by PCR 10_28_PCR_clones.jpg
Detection of infections by pathogens 10_29_PCR_viral.jpg
Application of PCR in forensic medicine 10_30_1_PCR_forensic.jpg Hypervariable microsatellite sequences VNTR: Variable Number of Tandem Repeats →as a distinctive DNA fingerprint for each individual
10_30_2_PCR_forensic.jpg When examining the variability at 5-10 different VNTR loci, the odds that two individuals would share the same fingerprint by chance are ~1/10,000,000,000
10_34_Reporter.genes.jpg commonly used reporter proteins in eucaryotic cells: β-galactosidase, GFP (green fluorescent protein)
10_35_GFP.jpg tissue specific promoter + GFP
10_36_mutagenesis.jpg site-directed mutagenesis
10_37_engineered.org.jpg • transgenic organisms: organisms into which a new gene has been introduced, or those whose genomes have been altered in other ways using recombinant DNA techniques. • in vitro mutated DNA fragment introduced into organisms (or cells) • mutated geneinserted into the genome of an organism (or cell) via homologous recombination
RNA interference (RNAi) • introducing into a cell or organism a ds RNA molecule whose nucleotide sequence matches that of the gene to be inactivated • the RNA molecule hybridizes with the mRNA of target gene and directs its degradation • the degraded RNA are subsequently used by the cell to produce more ds RNA which directs the continued elimination of the target mRNA • these short RNA fragments can be passed on to progeny cells, RNAi can cause heritable change in gene expression • the RNA fragments can enter the nucleus and interact with the target gene itself, directing its packaging into chromatin
transgenic organisms 10_38_ES.cells.jpg ex: gene knockout mice