DNA analysis Flashcards

1
Q

What charge does DNA have?

A

Negative.

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2
Q

Describe the steps in electrophoresis.

A
  1. The DNA preparation is run on a gel
  2. An electric current is applied across the gel and the DNA migrates to the positive electrode (anode).
  3. The gel is then visualised.
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3
Q

What are the 2 types of gel used in electrophoresis?

A

Agarose and acrylamide.

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4
Q

What is agarose?

A

A polysaccharide from seaweed.

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5
Q

Which type of gel gives a high resolution?

A

Acrylamide.

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6
Q

What is acrylamide?

A

A cross-linked polymer that is highly neurotoxic.

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7
Q

With agarose there is a need to estimate the sizes of the fragments as it is such low resolution. Describe how you would do this, give 3 steps.

A
  1. Run a marker collection, e.g. an RE digest where the fragments are known sizes, on a gel.
  2. Plot this digest on a graph: the y-axis is log size and the x-axis is distance travelled from the well.
  3. Use the standard curve to the size of unknown fragments based on how far they have travelled.
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8
Q

What chemical is essential for visualising an electrophoresis gel?

A

Ethidium bromide.

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9
Q

What is ethidium bromide (EB)?

A

A toxic dye.

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10
Q

How does EB work?

A

It intercalates with the DNA molecules, displaying increased fluorescence when intercalated than when free.

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11
Q

What wavelength of UV radiation is absorbed by the DNA and transmitted to EB?

A

254nm.

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12
Q

What wavelength of UV is re-emitted by EB?

A

590nm.

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13
Q

What spectrum is the wavelength of UV re-emitted by EB in?

A

Red-orange.

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14
Q

How is the gel visualised after exposure to UV?

A

With a transilluminator and polaroid film.

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15
Q

There are 3 states for the DNA in a plasmid. What are they?

A
  1. Supercoiled, the natural state.
  2. Relaxed, when the DNA has been nicked.
  3. Linear.
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16
Q

Which DNA state travels the furthest in electrophoresis?

A

Supercoiled.

17
Q

Which DNA state travels the least in electrophoresis?

A

Linear.

18
Q

What is Southern Blotting?

A

The hybridisation of a DNA probe to a DNA sample.

19
Q

Describe the 6 major steps in Southern Blotting.

A
  1. Run a RE digest on a gel.
  2. Denature the DNA with NaCl
  3. De-purinate the DNA with HCl (optional)
  4. ‘Blot’ the gel to transfer the DNA fragments onto a membrane.
  5. Add a labelled probe in a buffer solution.
  6. Detect the probes (depends on which type of probe is used).
20
Q

Why must the DNA be denatured in SB?

A

Only ssDNA can transfer to the membrane, the double-strands must be split apart.

21
Q

What is the purpose of depurination in SB?

A

To remove the purine bases, making the DNA fragments smaller.

22
Q

How does the blotting work?

A

By capillary action.

23
Q

What is used as a membrane in SB?

A

Nitrocellulose or nylon.

24
Q

If the probes were radioactive how would they be visualised?

A

By autoradiography.

25
Q

Give 5 major uses of southern blotting.

A
  1. Checking for gene insertion
  2. Finding gene homologues across species
  3. Finding clones in DNA libraries
  4. Forensics - DNA fingerprinting
  5. Pre-natal screening using FISH (not strictly SB but same principle)
26
Q

What is Northern Blotting?

A

Hybridisation of a DNA probe to an RNA sample.

27
Q

What is the purpose of northern blotting?

A

Tells you which genes are being expressed in a tissue.

28
Q

What happens to excess probes in SB and NB?

A

They are washed off by buffer solution.