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MCB 130L Lecture 1: DNA
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MCB 130L Lecture 1: DNA. Central Dogma of Molecular Biology Proposed by Francis Crick, 1958.

Dec 21, 2015

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Page 1: MCB 130L Lecture 1: DNA. Central Dogma of Molecular Biology Proposed by Francis Crick, 1958.

MCB 130L

Lecture 1: DNA

Page 2: MCB 130L Lecture 1: DNA. Central Dogma of Molecular Biology Proposed by Francis Crick, 1958.

Central Dogma of Molecular Biology

Proposed by Francis Crick, 1958

Page 3: MCB 130L Lecture 1: DNA. Central Dogma of Molecular Biology Proposed by Francis Crick, 1958.

Recombinant DNA technology

Recombinant DNA:

Creation of a novel combination (i.e. human and bacteria DNA)

Applications:

1. Cloning

2. Sequencing

3. Modification

Mutagenesis

Creation of novel fusion genes

Page 4: MCB 130L Lecture 1: DNA. Central Dogma of Molecular Biology Proposed by Francis Crick, 1958.

Importance of recombinant DNA Basic research

Gene structure splicing transcriptional regulation

Protein function domain structure post-translational modifications phosphorylation sites

Biotechnology Insulin, growth hormone Gene shuffling

Gene therapy

Page 5: MCB 130L Lecture 1: DNA. Central Dogma of Molecular Biology Proposed by Francis Crick, 1958.

Experimental Proposal:To determine the role of HexB in immune defense against tuberculosis?

Recombinant DNA technology

Clone HexB

Biochemical assays

Protein-protein interaction

X-ray crystallography

Antibody production

phenotype

cellular localization

Recombinant DNA technology

Clone HexB

phenotype

domain characterization

Purify ProteinMutate HexB Knockout/overexpress HexB

Page 6: MCB 130L Lecture 1: DNA. Central Dogma of Molecular Biology Proposed by Francis Crick, 1958.

1. DNA (genomic, plasmid, PCR, ….)

2. DNA fragmentation/digestion

3. DNA Separation and purification

4. Forming recombinant DNA: ligation

5. Cloning DNA: Transformation,

selection and amplification

Essential steps in the generation of recombinant DNA

Page 7: MCB 130L Lecture 1: DNA. Central Dogma of Molecular Biology Proposed by Francis Crick, 1958.

Amplification of specific DNA sequences:Polymerase Chain Reaction (PCR)

Applications:

1. general amplification 2. diagnostics 3. isolating DNA from ancient organisms 4. forensics

Invented by Kary Mullis (UCB PhD) while at Cetus Corp., Emeryville1993 Nobel Prize in Chemistry

Page 8: MCB 130L Lecture 1: DNA. Central Dogma of Molecular Biology Proposed by Francis Crick, 1958.

PCR movie

Page 9: MCB 130L Lecture 1: DNA. Central Dogma of Molecular Biology Proposed by Francis Crick, 1958.

Amplification of specific DNA sequences:Polymerase Chain Reaction (PCR)

1. Logarithmic amplification: # of copies = 2n, n = # of cycles

2. Sensitive: a single molecule can be amplified

3. Contamination a problem!

Page 10: MCB 130L Lecture 1: DNA. Central Dogma of Molecular Biology Proposed by Francis Crick, 1958.

Amplification of specific DNA sequences:Polymerase Chain Reaction (PCR)

1. Taq DNA polymerase from thermophilic bacteria (Thermus aquaticus, error rate 1/105)

2. dNTPs (dATP, dCTP, dTTP, dGTP)

3. Template = DNA to be amplified

4. Primers: 18-20 nucleotides complementary to template

5. Temperature cycling: 20-30 cycles

Denaturation 95ºC Annealing 55ºC to 60ºC

Extension 72ºC

Page 11: MCB 130L Lecture 1: DNA. Central Dogma of Molecular Biology Proposed by Francis Crick, 1958.

Amplification of specific DNA sequences:Polymerase Chain Reaction (PCR)

5’ 3’

3’ 5’

5’ 3’ 5’ 3’ 5’ 3’

3’ 5’3’ 5’3’ 5’

95ºC(Denaturation)

72ºC(Polymerase optimaltemperature)

55ºC(Annealing)

Cycle 1 (same procedure will be repeated 20-30 times)

Page 12: MCB 130L Lecture 1: DNA. Central Dogma of Molecular Biology Proposed by Francis Crick, 1958.

1. DNA (genomic, plasmid, PCR, ….)

2. DNA fragmentation/digestion

3. DNA Separation and purification

4. Forming recombinant DNA: ligation

5. Cloning DNA: Transformation,

selection and amplification

Essential steps in the generation of recombinant DNA

Page 14: MCB 130L Lecture 1: DNA. Central Dogma of Molecular Biology Proposed by Francis Crick, 1958.

Cloning DNA: plasmid vectors

Origin of replication

Ampr gene (selectable)

Polylinker or multiple cloning site (MCS)

(Bacteriophages = alternative cloning vector)

Page 15: MCB 130L Lecture 1: DNA. Central Dogma of Molecular Biology Proposed by Francis Crick, 1958.

Multiple cloning site

Region of plasmid containing multiple restriction enzyme sites to enable insertion of DNA of interest

Page 16: MCB 130L Lecture 1: DNA. Central Dogma of Molecular Biology Proposed by Francis Crick, 1958.

Cutting DNA: restriction enzymes

Site specific endonucleases produced by bacteria

Recognize palindromic sequences (same 5’ --> 3’ on both strands)

Evolved to cleave bacteriophage DNA

Page 17: MCB 130L Lecture 1: DNA. Central Dogma of Molecular Biology Proposed by Francis Crick, 1958.

Figure 4: Bacteria cells that produce restriction endonucleases also produce modification enzymes that methylate bases in the recognition site.

Cutting DNA: restriction enzymes

How do bacteria survive with restriction enzyme that cleaves DNA?- bacteria DNA is protected from cleavage by methylation

Page 18: MCB 130L Lecture 1: DNA. Central Dogma of Molecular Biology Proposed by Francis Crick, 1958.

Separating and purifying DNA fragments: gel electrophoresis

•DNA is negatively charged•Moves to the (+) pole in electric field

Ethidium bromide intercalates DNA, fluoresces in UV light

Page 19: MCB 130L Lecture 1: DNA. Central Dogma of Molecular Biology Proposed by Francis Crick, 1958.

1. DNA (genomic, plasmid, PCR, ….)

2. DNA fragmentation/digestion

3. DNA Separation and purification

4. Forming recombinant DNA: ligation

5. Cloning DNA: Transformation,

selection and amplification

Essential steps in the generation of recombinant DNA

Page 20: MCB 130L Lecture 1: DNA. Central Dogma of Molecular Biology Proposed by Francis Crick, 1958.

Forming recombinant DNA molecules: ligation

- T4 DNA ligase

-Requires ATP

-Phosphodiester bond

-Ligation of sticky ends is more efficient than blunt

Page 21: MCB 130L Lecture 1: DNA. Central Dogma of Molecular Biology Proposed by Francis Crick, 1958.

Cloning DNA molecules: transformation, selection and amplification

1. Transformation = Introduction of plasmid into bacteria- Make “competent” bacteria- Add DNA- Inefficient uptake

2. Selection for antibiotic resistance

3. Amplification: Bacteria replicate w/ plasmid

Page 22: MCB 130L Lecture 1: DNA. Central Dogma of Molecular Biology Proposed by Francis Crick, 1958.

Other Methods in recombinant DNA technology

Southern blot

DNA sequencing

Page 23: MCB 130L Lecture 1: DNA. Central Dogma of Molecular Biology Proposed by Francis Crick, 1958.

Southern Blot

Microarray technology evolved from Southern blotting

Page 24: MCB 130L Lecture 1: DNA. Central Dogma of Molecular Biology Proposed by Francis Crick, 1958.

DNA Sequencing: dye terminator sequencing

Page 25: MCB 130L Lecture 1: DNA. Central Dogma of Molecular Biology Proposed by Francis Crick, 1958.

This week’s lab:

PCR

Restriction Digests

Agarose Gel Electrophoresis