Unit 1 Flashcards

1
Q

What is FRAP and how does it work

A

Fluoresecent Recovery After Photobleaching.
Refers to a technique where we photobleach an area after halting protein synthesis such that the recovery of protein in that area show us that other fluorescent proteins have moved there.

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2
Q

Explain EM Tomography

A

This is an electron microscope technique where we take images from a bunch of different angles to reduce noise/blur and gain the capability to build a 3D image.

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3
Q

How do we enhance contrast in Light Microscopy

A

-Stains: Stains only let out light of a specific wavelength and differentially stain different parts of the cell
-DIC (Normarski): This technique takes advantage of changes in refractive index of dense and less dense areas and translates this into sharp edges
-the other one: This technique amplies the phase changes of light as it passes through the sample.

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4
Q

What is Deconvolution Microscopy

A

This is a blur-reducing technique in Light Microscopy. It involves using a computer with the ability to precisely manipulate the Z-axis such that it eliminates all light from above or below the axis of choice.

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5
Q

What is Confocal Microscopy

A

This is a blur reducing technique in Light Microscopy. It involves shining light through a pinhole that is confocal with the another pinhole infront of the detector. This ensure that only focused light reaches the detector.

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6
Q

What is Single Particle Reconstruction (SPR)

A

This is a technique in cryo-electron Microscopy. It involves getting a bunch of individual pure molecules crystalized in vitreous ice at various orientations and then using the different orientations to get a full 3D structure.

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7
Q

What is FRET and how does it work

A

Fluorescent …. It involves having two molecules you think might interact conjugated to 2 different fluorescent proteins. The emission spectrum of one should match the excitation spectrum of the other such that if they get REALLY close ( ) the second one will glow.

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8
Q

What is immunolabelling

A

This is when we use primary or secondary antibodies conjugated to a marker (Ex: fluorescent molecule or electron dense gold balls) in order to label a specific antigen.

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9
Q

what is immunofluorescence

A

This is when the antibodies are conjugated to a fluorescent molecule.

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10
Q

what is immunoelectron microscopy

A

This is when the antibodies are conjugated to gold balls of one (or various) size(s)

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11
Q

what is GFP? Where does it come from?

A

This is a B-barrel shaped green fluorescent molecule. It comes from the jellyfish aquoria victoria.

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12
Q

What do we use GFP for?

A

The following are examples of uses
-Conjugate to protien to see where it comes
-Replace coding region to monitor promoter activity
-another one

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13
Q

How can we study protein dynamics in living cells? List 2 methods

A

-fluorescent protein fusions
-FRAP

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14
Q

What are the basic principles of fluorescence Microscopy?

A

We shine light through a filter such that only excitation light gets in. It fluorescents the molecule and then the detector has a filter such that only emission light reaches it. Thus, we see glow on a dark background

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15
Q

Explain how “caged” molecules work

A

We don’t activate a fluorescence molecule until it is ready.

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16
Q

What is TEM

A

Transmission Electron Microscopy
-electrons are fired in a laser at the specimen.
-the detector looks at what makes it through and the rest is dark (thus less dense is light and more electron dense is darker)

17
Q

What is SEM

A

Scanning EM
-The laser goes point by point and the detector detects what is reflected or emitted.
-gives us an image of the 3D surface

18
Q

What is the Cell Doctrine

A

Cells are the basic units of life

19
Q

How big is the average euk. cell? What abt the average organelle?

A

cell: 2000 nm?
organelle: 200 nm?

20
Q

Explain what genetically encoded biosensors are

A

When we fuse a fluorescent molecule to a protein’s coding region

21
Q

What are the main differences between light and electron Microscopy?

A

Light
-200 nm resolution
-uses photons
-cells can be alive

Electron
-2 nm resolution
-uses electrons
-cells in vacuum, thus dead