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What do you notice about these phrases?

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Presentation on theme: "What do you notice about these phrases?"— Presentation transcript:

1 What do you notice about these phrases?
radar racecar Madam I’m Adam Able was I ere I saw Elba a man, a plan, a canal, Panama Was it a bar or a bat I saw?

2 DNA Technology & Genomics
Chapter 20. Biotechnology: DNA Technology & Genomics By Kim Foglia, Division Ave. H.S., Levittown, N..Y. Modified by K. Crawford, Science Hill High School, Johnson City, TN

3 I. The Essential Questions…
How can we use our knowledge of DNA to: diagnose disease or defect? cure disease or defect? change/improve organisms? What are the techniques & applications of biotechnology? direct manipulation of genes for practical purposes

4 One example: Glo Pigs! http://www.sciencebuzz.org/blog/when_pigs_glow

5 Genetically modified pigs glow under black light

6 Production of clotting factor IX in sheep’s milk
Ewe is given hormones to super-ovulate Eggs are inseminated, harvested, then injected with rDNA. Surrogate has transgenic egg implanted, baby lambs are born When mature, they make milk Clotting factor in milk must be isolated and purified for human use Topic 4.4.9

7 Production of retinol and beta carotene by rice
Rice does not normally produce retinol or beta carotene Rice has the precursor molecule to make retinol but not the enzyme Retinol is necessary to prevent blindness Topic 4.4.9

8 Production of retinol and beta carotene by rice
Gene isolated from daffodils and Erwinia bacteria is transferred to rice Transgenic rice is then cross-bred with local rice strains Voila! Rice will now produce retinol and beta-carotene Topic 4.4.9

9 II. Historical perspective on manipulation of genes
A.Genetic manipulation of organisms is not new. Humans have been doing this for thousands of years plant & animal breeding INDIRECTLY manipulating DNA

10 B. Evolution & breeding of food plants
Evolution of Zea mays from ancestral teosinte (left) to modern corn (right). The middle figure shows possible hybrids of teosinte & early corn varieties

11 “Descendants” of the wild mustard
Brassica sp. What vegetables to you see descending from this plant?

12 5.4.2

13 C. Animal husbandry / Animal breeding Allowing only certain plants and animals to breed.

14 Biotechnology today D. Genetic engineering involves: Our tool kit…
manipulation of DNA If you are going to engineer DNA & genes & organisms, then you need a set of tools to work with. This unit is a survey of those tools… Our tool kit…

15 III. Bioengineering Tool kit
A. Basic Tools restriction enzymes ligase plasmids / cloning DNA libraries / probes B. Advanced Tools PCR DNA sequencing gel electrophoresis Southern blotting microarrays

16 C. Cut, Paste, Copy, Find… biotechnology terms.…
Word processing terms and analogous biotechnology terms.… Cut = restriction enzymes Paste = ligase Copy = plasmids From bacteria Process called transformation Often requires use of PCR Find = Southern blotting / probes

17 D. Cut DNA Restriction enzymes used
Also called restriction endonucleases Discovered in 1960s Evolved in bacteria to cut up foreign DNA (“restriction”) Served as a protection against viruses & other bacteria Bacteria protect their own DNA by methylation & by not using the base sequences recognized by the enzymes in their own DNA

18 E. Restriction enzymes Madam I’m Adam Action of enzyme
Cut DNA at specific sequences called restriction site DNA bases form a symmetrical “palindrome” Also produces protruding ends called sticky ends Many different enzyme names. Named after organism they are found in. Examples: EcoRI, HindIII, BamHI, SmaI CTGAATTCCG GACTTAAGGC CTG|AATTCCG GACTTAA|GGC

19 Discovery of restriction enzymes
Werner Arber Daniel Nathans Hamilton O. Smith Restriction enzymes are named for the organism they come from: EcoRI = 1st restriction enzyme found in E. coli Werner Arber discovered restriction enzymes. He postulated that these enzymes bind to DNA at specific sites containing recurring structural elements made up of specific basepair sequences. Hamilton Smith verified Arber's hypothesis with a purified bacterial restriction enzyme and showed that this enzyme cuts DNA in the middle of a specific symmetrical sequence. Other restriction enzymes have similar properties, but different enzymes recognize different sequences. Ham Smith now works at Celera Genomics, the company who sequenced the human genome. Dan Nathans pioneered the application of restriction enzymes to genetics. He demonstrated their use for the construction of genetic maps and developed and applied new methodology involving restriction enzymes to solve various problems in genetics.

20 F. Biotech use of restriction enzymes
GAATTC CTTAAG DNA Restriction enzyme cuts the DNA Sticky ends (complementary single-stranded DNA tails) AATTC G AATTC G G CTTAA G CTTAA Add DNA from another source cut with same restriction enzyme AATTC G G AATTC CTTAA G DNA ligase joins the strands. Results in: Recombinant DNA molecule GAATTC CTTAAG

21 G. Paste DNA Sticky ends allow: Ligase
H bonds between complementary bases to form Ligase enzyme “seals” strands Bonds sugar-phosphate bonds Is the covalent bond of DNA backbone

22 H. How to copy modified DNA
Use plasmids which are small, self-replicating circular DNA molecules. You insert DNA sequence into plasmid. Plasmid serves as a vector = “vehicle” into organism; A way to get gene into the bacteria Then conduct transformation: Insert recombinant plasmid into bacteria Bacteria will make lots of copies of plasmid. Grow recombinant bacteria on agar plate New bacterial colonies are clones (identical) produces many copies of inserted gene

23 I. Recombinant plasmid contains:
Antibiotic resistance genes as a selectable marker Restriction sites for splicing (adding) in gene of interest Selectable marker Plasmid has both “added” gene & antibiotic resistance gene If bacteria don’t pick up plasmid then they die on antibiotic plates If bacteria do pick up plasmid then they survive on antibiotic plates Is selecting for successful transformation selection How do we know what’s the right combination of genes on a plasmid? Trail and error research work. selectable markers high copy rate convenient restriction sites There are companies that still develop plasmids, patent them & sell them. Biotech companies (ex. New England BioLabs)

24 Selection for plasmid uptake is first part of screening process.
Ampicillin becomes a selecting agent Only bacteria with the plasmid will grow on amp plate only transformed bacteria grow all bacteria grow LB plate LB/amp plate

25 Need to screen the bacteria
Need to make sure bacteria have recombinant plasmid is second part of screening process. plasmid amp resistance LacZ gene restriction sites lactose  blue color recombinant plasmid amp resistance broken LacZ gene lactose  white color X inserted gene of interest origin of replication EcoRI all in LacZ gene BamHI HindIII

26 LacZ is a screening system
Makes sure that the inserted plasmid is recombinant plasmid because not all plasmids have gene of interest. LacZ gene on plasmid produces digestive enzyme lactose(X-gal)  blue Makes blue colonies Insertion of foreign DNA into LacZ gene breaks gene No enzyme produced Makes white colonies White bacterial colonies have recombinant plasmid X X We want these!!

27 Amp selection & LacZ screening
gene of interest LacZ gene - amp resistance LB/amp LB/amp/Xgal

28 IV. What if you don’t have your gene conveniently on a chunk of DNA ready to insert into a plasmid?
Then you have to find your “gene of interest” out of the entire genome of the organism. How to do this? By Kim Foglia, Division Ave. H.S., Levittown, N..Y. Modified by K. Crawford, Science Hill High School, Johnson City, TN

29 A. Use DNA libraries Cut up all of nuclear DNA from many cells of an organism Use restriction enzyme Clone all fragments into plasmids at same time “shotgun” cloning Create a stored collection of DNA fragments Petri dish has a collection of all DNA fragments from the organism

30 B. Problems… A lot of junk! Introns! introns
human genomic library has more “junk” than genes in it Introns! If you want to insert a human gene into bacteria, you can’t have…. introns

31 Solution… Don’t start with DNA… Use mRNA
copy of the gene without the junk! But in the end, you need DNA to insert into plasmid… How do you go from RNA  DNA? reverse transcriptase!

32 cDNA (copy DNA) libraries
Collection of only the coding sequences of expressed genes Extract mRNA from cells Use reverse transcriptase from retroviruses to make RNA  DNA Insert into plasmid Applications Need edited DNA for expression in bacteria Ex. - human insulin gene inserted into bacteria Could you imagine how much that first insulin clone was worth to Genentech? One little piece of DNA in a plasmid worth billions! It put them on the map & built a multi-billion dollar biotech company.


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