Title: DNA TECH: GENOMICS
1DNA TECH GENOMICS
2most important concept
-
- DNA -gtmore DNA --gt RNA -gt protein
- This "central dogma" of today's molecular biology
has applications - in medicine and biotechnology.
3HUMAN GENOME PROJECT
- a "rough draft" (published 2001 in Science and
Nature) of the base sequences of all 30,000 human
genes - maps of where these genes are located on
chromosomes
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5but
- they don't yet know what all of these genes do--
- for many of the genes they don't know which ones
are for which proteins - or what effect they have on phenotypic traits
- or where some disease alleles are.
6http//www.ornl.gov/TechResources/Human_Genome/pro
ject/info.html
- The human genome contains 3164.7 million base
pairs - The average gene consists of 3000 bases, but
sizes vary greatly, with the largest known human
gene being dystrophin at 2.4 million bases. - The total number of genes is estimated at 30,000
to 35,000much lower than previous estimate - Almost all (99.9) nucleotide bases are exactly
the same in all people. - The functions are unknown for over 50 of
discovered genes.
7http//www.ornl.gov/TechResources/Human_Genome/pro
ject/info.html
- The Wheat from the Chaff
- Less than 2 of the genome codes for proteins.
- Repeated sequences that do not code for proteins
("junk DNA") make up at least 50 of the human
genome. - Repetitive sequences are thought to have no
direct functions, but they shed light on
chromosome structure and dynamics. Over time,
these repeats reshape the genome by rearranging
it, creating entirely new genes, and modifying
and reshuffling existing genes. - During the past 50 million years, a dramatic
decrease seems to have occurred in the rate of
accumulation of repeats in the human genome.
8http//www.ornl.gov/TechResources/Human_Genome/pro
ject/info.html
- How Humans Compare with Other Species
- Unlike the human's seemingly random distribution
of gene-rich areas, many other organisms' genomes
are more uniform, with genes evenly spaced
throughout. - Humans have on average three times as many kinds
of proteins as the fly or worm because of mRNA
transcript "alternative splicing" and chemical
modifications to the proteins. This process can
yield different protein products from the same
gene.
9http//www.ornl.gov/TechResources/Human_Genome/pro
ject/info.html
- How Humans Compare with Other Species
- Humans share most of the same protein families
with worms, flies, and plants, but the number of
gene family members has expanded in humans,
especially in proteins involved in development
and immunity. - The human genome has a much greater portion (50)
of repeat sequences than the mustard weed (11),
the worm (7), and the fly (3).
10http//www.ornl.gov/TechResources/Human_Genome/pro
ject/info.html
- How Humans Compare with Other Species
- Although humans appear to have stopped
accumulating repeated DNA over 50 million years
ago, there seems to be no such decline in
rodents. This may account for some of the
fundamental differences between hominids and
rodents, although gene estimates are similar in
these species. Scientists have proposed many
theories to explain evolutionary contrasts
between humans and other organisms, including
those of life span, litter sizes, inbreeding, and
genetic drift (which well study after fall
break).
11http//www.ornl.gov/TechResources/Human_Genome/pro
ject/info.html
- The ratio of germline (sperm or egg cell)
mutations is 21 in males vs females. Researchers
point to several reasons for the higher mutation
rate in the male germline, including the greater
number of cell divisions required for sperm
formation than for eggs.
12http//www.ornl.gov/TechResources/Human_Genome/pro
ject/info.html
- The draft sequence already is having an impact on
finding genes associated with disease. A number
of genes have been pinpointed and associated with
breast cancer, muscle disease, deafness, and
blindness. Additionally, finding the DNA
sequences underlying such common diseases as
cardiovascular disease, diabetes, arthritis, and
cancers is being aided by the human variation
maps (SNPs) generated in the HGP in cooperation
with the private sector. These genes and SNPs
provide focused targets for the development of
effective new therapies.
13http//www.ornl.gov/TechResources/Human_Genome/pro
ject/info.html
- http//doegenomestolife.org/
The Next Step Functional Genomics
14TEXTBOOK POINTS
- 1. How they did the sequencing
- 2.More Important What have we learned and what
else will we learn?
15Newer methods (chapter 16)
- Dyes on different nucleotides instead of
radioactivity - (still electrophoresis, but no longer 4 bands)
- machine scanner tabulates color sequences
(instead of error-prone human looking at film)
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18sequencing machines
19Fig16.3
20 21- These last steps are done by computers.
22Latest genome dogs
- Less detail than human genome (shotgun pattern
overlaps sampled less) - newer techniques meant faster results
- other genomes coming real soon now
23 DNA used for genetic engineering is
always recombinant DNA, involving genes from
natural sources
- partly because real genes are too long to be
synthesized practically - and partly because the proteins which would be
translated do not fold into functional and
predictable tertiary shapes. Scientists don't
know enough about proteins yet. We still need
cells.
24MORE IMPORTANT
- WHAT THEY LEARNED AND WHAT THEY WILL LEARN FROM
THE GENOME PROJECT
25Lateral Transfer
- Genomes getting genes from unrelated critters
and viruses - important because
- germs and parasites become more toxic
- and more resistant to antibiotics and pesticides
- makes tracing ancestry trickier
26Junk DNA?
- Hypervariable
- because of transposons
- and because it does not affect phenotype (like
silent mutations) - used for DNA fingerprints because its
hypervariable - Probably not junk but spare parts and homologous
species exclusion tickets
27Where ALL the genes are
- Not finished yet.
- Big research now Functional Genomics
- which genes are being expressed (transcribed)
- when and where
- proteonomics how the translated products
function - Best Tool chip!
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30future
- http//doegenomestolife.org/
31 Biotech TOOLS
- restriction endonuclease enzymes
- nucleic acid fragments (RFLPs, etc.)
- electrophoresis
- probes
- PCR
- sequencing
- ligase enzyme
- synthetic nucleotides
- BACs and plasmids
- cDNA
- libraries
- chips
- more later
32 Biotech TOOLS
- For each, know
- what it does
- why anybody would use it
- how or why it works especially if it involves
something relevant to the natural structure and
function of DNA.
33most important concept
- DNA -gtmore DNA --gt RNA -gt protein
- the natural processes of replication can be used
in the laboratory to synthesize bits of DNA for
analyzing more DNA-- - disorders,
- forensics,
- archaeology and paleontology,
- pure research on how cells work....