Week 22: (A) Introducing Sanger Sequencing, genome sequencing strategies, and next generation (Illumina) sequencing. Flashcards

1
Q

What is Sanger sequencing ?

A

sequencing by synthesis method

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2
Q

What do we need for Sanger sequencing?

A

sequencing primer, nucleotide to create new strand

template DNA, DNA polymerase, some form of detection method

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3
Q

What is used in the radioactive dye determination sequence method?

A

each combination of 4 bases, (deoxyNTPS) combined with 1 dideoxynucleotides which would terminate the reaction.

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4
Q

What methods did Sanger use to sequence?

A

dye termination sequencing (radioactive method)

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5
Q

What is the ddNTP labeled with?

A

fluorophore, diff colour for each ddNTP

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6
Q

What types of ddNTPs are there?

A

one for all 4 bases

A, G, T, C

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7
Q

How do we detect where ddNTPs terminate the sequence?

A

capillary electrophoresis

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8
Q

How are the sequences separated in capillary electrophoresis?

A
sample buffer (+ve change) 
runs along a narrow glass tube with gel in it.
runs to +ve buffer solution. 
as it runs to buffer solu, it passes through a laser which allows the fluorescent detector to detect what base it has been terminated at
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9
Q

How can the Sanger method fail?

A

if we get impurities in the solution by sequencing 2 strands at once with the same primer
(will cute both sequences potentially at the same point and cause overlay)

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10
Q

What needs to happen in order to minimise overlay of sequencing but not have to create many sequences, primers etc.?

A

1) split the genome into manageable chunks (billions to 40,000-200,000 bases)
2) work out which order they are in
3) get the DNA sequence of each chunk
4) put them together and we have a genome sequence.

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11
Q

How do we split the genome into manageable chunks?

A

use restriction enzyme. find one that is rare cutting (every 50-200kb) cut up into smaller chunks

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12
Q

How do we clone the chunks of DNA sequence?

A

clone into a BAC vector to give artificial chromosomes

i.e a plasmid that can replicate DNA sequences of that size faithfully

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13
Q

What is the plasmid called that we replicate and amplify chunks of DNA in?

A

BAC vector

bacterial artificial chromosome

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14
Q

What does transfect mean?

A

introduce (genetic material) by infecting a cell with free nucleic acid.

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15
Q

What happens after the DNA chunk is inserted into BAC?

A

it is colonised on an agar plate,
colonies form (each one a diff chunk of the sequence)
put into wet and iron as a single culture
purified
analyses independently

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16
Q

how do we work out which order the DNA genomic sequences are in?

A

carry out an enzyme digest
use the enzyme digest fingerprints (overlapping regions)
to work out the order
create a physical map

17
Q

What is it called when we create a physical map from the enzyme digest?

A

tiling paths

like a jigsaw

18
Q

What is the stage of getting the DNA sequence of each chunk called?

A

shotgun sequence a see blow the whole thing a part

19
Q

What do we do to the genomic sequence in shotgun sequencing?

A

fragment the genomic sequence into a suitable size ~1200bp

20
Q

Why do we fragment the genomic sequence into 1200bp?

A

as the total length is 1400 bp so we will get some overlap when we shotgun the sequence

21
Q

Where do we put the fragmented genomic DNA?

A

into a sequencing vector

22
Q

What type of plasmid do we insert the fragmented genomic sequence into?

A
sequencing vector 
normal plasmid 
flanking the site were we insert out DNA
The 2 sites which correspond to standard primer sites 
use the exact same primer
23
Q

what is a contiguous?

A

the sequence assembles without the overlaps

24
Q

What is the economic problem of Sanger sequencing?

A

slow an expensive

25
Q

What is the difference between Sanger sequencing and illumina sequencing?

A

sanger: sequence all bases in one molecule at a time
Illumina: sequence all molecules the same time

26
Q

What is the disadvantage to Illumina?

A

relatively short reads (19bp now up to 300bp)

expensive for single sequence

27
Q

How does illumine work?

A

sequence one base at a time in millions of sequences

28
Q

What are the steps in illumina sequencing?

A

spread DNA sequence on a microscope slide
really diluted,
amplify DNA by PCR to create a polony
use a common universal primer
can sequence one base and stop then sequence the next base and stop

29
Q

How do we dilute the DNA sequence for illumina?

A

take a scalpel and take a bit the DNA sequence at the appropriate band on an agarose gel, put in an epindorf tube.
needs it spread out to see

30
Q

What is shotgun sequencing?

A

The method involves breaking the genome into a collection of small DNA fragments that are sequenced individually.