Enzymes and restriction mapping Flashcards

1
Q

Recombinant proteins

A

Insulin
Interferon
G-CSF

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2
Q

Transgenic organisms

A

Disease models
Improved agricultural yields
Restriction, ligation & other enzymes

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3
Q

Nucleases

A
  • Degrade nucleic acids by hydrolysing phosphodiester bonds
  • Ribonuclease (RNase): degrade RNA
  • Deoxyribonuclease (DNase): degrade DNA
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4
Q

Exonuclease

A

Degrade from end of molecule

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5
Q

Endonucleas

A

Cleave within nucleotide chain

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6
Q

Restriction endonucleases

A

Limit transfer of nucleic acids from infecting phages into bacteria.

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7
Q

What do restriction endonucleases do?

A
  1. recognise a specific sequence
  2. cut that sequence
    Restriction enzymes catalyse the hydrolysis of phosphodiester bonds
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8
Q

Different restriction enzymes recognise …

A

Different specific DNA sequences

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9
Q

What are recognition sites?

A

4-8 base pairs in length, depending on the enzyme, and palindromic

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10
Q

Some nucleases

A

Produce an overhang or

Produce a blunt end

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11
Q

What are restriction enzymes needed for?

A

Cloning
Molecular diagnostics
Characterization of plasmids

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12
Q

What do restriction molecules allow?

A

DNA molecules from different souces can be joined

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13
Q

Restriction enzymes in molecular diagnostics

A

Sickle cell anaemia - Single nucleotide changes can create/destroy restriction enzyme sites

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14
Q

Ddel site

A

(5’CTNAG3’) is lost is sickle cell anaemia

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15
Q

Restriction maps

A
  • Map of restriction sites within a molecule
  • Crude way of mapping an unknown molecule
  • Useful way of describing plasmids
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16
Q

DNA ligase

A

Repairs nicks in phosphodiester backbone

17
Q

DNA polymerase

A

DNA synthesis in 5’ to 3’ direction

18
Q

Why use DNA polymerase?

A

• PCR amplification
• Generation of probes.
• Blunt-ending of DNA overhangs.
The 2 DNA fragments can now be ligated.

19
Q

Phosphatase

A

Hydrolyses a phosphate group off its substrate.
• Calf intestinal alkaline phosphatase
• Shrimp alkaline phosphatase

20
Q

Why use a phosphatase?

A

To prevent cut plasmids from resealing.

21
Q

Polynucleotide kinase

A

Phosphate from ATP to substrate

Polynucleotide kinase adds phosphate to 5’ hydoxyl group of DNA or RNA

22
Q

Why use a polynucleotide kinase?

A
  • To phosphorylate chemically synthesized DNA
    so that it can be ligated to another fragment.
  • To sensitively label DNA so that it can be traced
    using:
    - radioactively labeled ATP
    - fluorescently labeled ATP
23
Q

Probes

A
  • Fragment of ssDNA (or RNA)
  • 20 – 1000 bases in length
  • Complementary to the gene of interest
24
Q

Reverse transcriptase

A
  • RNA dependent DNA polymerase
  • Isolated from RNA-containing retroviruses
  • Synthesizes a DNA molecule complementary to a mRNA template using dNTPs
25
Q

Priming for reverse trancription

A
  • Random primers: cDNAs up to 700bp but will cover all of the length of all of the RNA molecules.
  • Oligo(dT) primers: useful for cloning cDNAs and cDNA libraries, but some might not be full-length.