module 6 processes Flashcards

(15 cards)

1
Q

What do terminator bases do?

A
  • stop DNA synthesis
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2
Q

What are the ingredients for DNA sequencing?

A
  • DNA polymerase, primer, excess of nucleotides, terminator bases (fluorescent ddNTPs) and DNA to be sequenced.
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3
Q

Why do ddNTPs stop DNA synth?

A
  • lack a 3’ OH group
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4
Q

describe the process of DNA sequencing

A
  • DNA sample heated to 95C (denaturation)
  • Cool to 50C (primers anneal)
  • Heat to 60C. (DNA polymerase can start adding complementary bases)
  • Incorporation of a ddNTP means synthesis cannot continue
  • Cycling continues until all possible strands/fragments are produced
  • Gel electrophoresis –> southern blotting on nylon membrane; UV light. Or capillary electrophoresis which separates by mass and uses colour-detecting lasers.
  • Both show ddNTPs, meaning the final base of each fragment can be read and thus the base sequence of the complementary strand is revealed.
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5
Q

describe the process of genetic fingerprinting

A
  • collect a sample containing some DNA
  • extracted and PCR done
  • Digested with specific restriction endonucleases; cut at specific recognition sites
  • separation with gel electrophoresis with alkaline buffer (this forms ssDNA)
  • DNA hybridises with fluorescent/ radioactive probes
  • transferred to nylon membrane and exposed to UV or X-rays
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6
Q

How can electrophoresis be used for proteins?

A
  • Proteins must be denatured to remove 3D shape
  • Proteins can be positive, negative or neutral. SDS is added to make them all negative
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7
Q

Describe the ingredients of PCR

A
  • thermocycler
  • DNA fragment to be amplified, taq polymerase, primers, DNA nucleotides
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8
Q

Describe the process of PCR

A
  • Heated to 95C to break hydrogen bonds; ssDNA
  • Primers anneal at 55C
  • DNA polymerase attaches new complementary free nucleotides and makes a new strand complementary to each template. 72C
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9
Q

What are 3 temperatures used in PCR

A

95C, 55C, 72C

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10
Q

Advantages of PCR?

A
  • automated: more efficient
  • rapid: 100 billion copies of DNA can be made within hours
  • doesn’t require living cells
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11
Q

Describe the process of genetic engineering

A
  • isolating the gene (mRNA reverse transcription, new synthesis or same restriction endonuclease)
  • insertion of gene into open plasmid with marker gene. Same endonuclease used so sticky ends are complementary. Ligase catalyses formation of phosphodiester bonds between them
  • transformation: increase cell membrane permeability. Calcium ion, heat shock. Electroporation. High concentrations. Enters cytoplasm.
  • identification using fluorescent (or other) marker gene.
  • Cloning/growth
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12
Q

What issues might occur during G.E of bacteria?

A
  • recombinant plasmid doesn’t get inside cell.
  • plasmid re-joins before the DNA fragment entered.
  • DNA fragment sticks to itself (mini plasmid shape), rather than inserting into the plasmid.
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13
Q

Genetic engineering of plants

A
  1. Cut a leaf. Sterilise.
  2. Expose the leaf to a bacterial suspension containing a Ti plasmid (from agrobacterium tumefaciens) with genes for desired trait and antibiotic resistance.
  3. Expose leaf to an antibiotic to kill cells which lack new genes. Callus forms from gene-altered cells.
  4. Allow callus to sprout shoots and roots.
  5. Transfer to the soil to grow.
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14
Q

How can plants be genetically engineered using electrofusion?

A
  • Cell walls must first be removed by cellulases.
  • Cells of different types can be fused, using electricity, to form a polypoid, transgenic cell.
  • Hormones used to grow new cells walls, callus forms.
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15
Q

uses of DNA profiling

A

crime scenes
paternity testing
evolutionary relationships
disease risk
disaster victims
breeding programmes
classification

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