The genome's content Flashcards

1
Q

What four ways can chromosomes be mapped?

A

Karyotypic map - from microscopic observation of chromosome spreads
Linkage map - genetic map created by monitoring recombination between markers, unit is cM
Physical map - measured in base pairs, in practice may be string path of overlapping BAC clones
Sequence map - sequence of bases along chromosomes
(resolution gets higher)

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2
Q

Why are model organisms such as E.coli easy to sequence genomes of?

A

Relatively small genome size

Genetic traceability

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3
Q

When was the human genome project started and completed?

A

1990-2003

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4
Q

How was genetic analysis carried out before genome sequencing? (3)

A

Gene mapping - monitoring recombination between markers
Forward genetics - identifying mutations responsible for a phenotype
Reverse genetics - identifying phenotypes associated with a specific mutation

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5
Q

What do genome projects allow us to do?

A
Catalogue genes
Facilitate forward/reverse genetics
Gene expression profiling
Analyse non-coding DNA sequences
Compare genomes for different organisms
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6
Q

What is functional genomics?

A

Analysing gene and protein product function (and gene regulation/protein-protein interactions) using genome-wide approach with large data sets rather than on a gene by gene basis

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7
Q

What is comparative genomics?

A

Comparing genome sequence/organisation and looking at similarities and differences as well as evolutionary relationships between organisms

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8
Q

What does Sanger sequencing require?

A
Template DNA to be sequenced
DNA polymerase
The four DNA nucleotides
A primer
Dideoxy forms of all four nucleotides (ddATP, ddGTP, ddTTP and ddCTP) labelled with different colour dye
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9
Q

Why do dideoxy nucleotides terminate synthesis?

A

They lack an OH group on the 3’ carbon of the sugar ring so no further nucleotides can be added to chain

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10
Q

How does Sanger sequencing work?

A
  • Primer binds template DNA and DNA polymerase adds nucleotides to chain until a dideoxy nucleotide added
  • Fragments run through gel electrophoresis which separates fragments by size (short fragments move quickly, long fragments slow)
  • From colours of dyes emitted the DNA sequence can be built up one nucleotide at a time
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11
Q

What are the limitations of Sanger sequencing?

A

Low throughput
Expensive
Impractical for large projects that require sequencing of large/multiple genomes
(therefore replaced by next generation sequencing technologies)

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12
Q

How are next-generation sequencing techniques improved?

A

Allow parallel sequencing of millions of DNA fragments simultaneously so increased speed and reduced costs

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13
Q

What is multiplexing?

A

Allows you to sequence millions of DNA sequences simultaneously
DNA extracted, shredded and tiled onto a surface
PCR amplifies specific sequences
Take all colonies at sequence at same time

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14
Q

What is ‘454’ pyrosequencing?

A

Shred DNA into fragments, ligate oligonucleotide adaptors and amplify by emulsion PCR
Pyrophosphate released in chain reaction and light detection acts to detect nucleotide incorporated by DNA polymerase
(454 Life Sciences unveiled first machine in 2005)

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15
Q

What is Illumina sequencing?

A

Repeated cycles of bridge amplification PCR to obtain clusters
Based on reversible dye terminators that can identify nucleotides when washed over DNA strands

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16
Q

What is a third generation sequencing technology and how is it an improvement?

A

PacBio single molecule real-time SMRT

Bypasses DNA amplification and can achieve longer read lengths from single DNA molecules

17
Q

How can looking at tumour genomes be helpful?

A

Can compare multiple genomes from different biopsies within a tumour to identify which shared mutations are the initial ‘driver’ mutations