Title: Jeff Young, Botanist youngbiol'wwu'edu x3638 Office: BI412
1Jeff Young, Botanistyoung_at_biol.wwu.edux3638Offi
ce BI412
Office Hours M 3 - 4 W 2 - 3 F 3 - 4
Arabidopsis thaliana Genome-based, molecular
study of plant physiology and environmental
responses.
2Omics
- Genomics the cloning and molecular
characterization of entire genomes, - Genome the entire complement of genetic material
in a cell, - Transcriptomics genomic scale gene expression
studies, - Proteomics the study of the proteins produced by
the genome.
3Interactomeour focus
- Proteins interact with DNA
Proteins interact with Proteins
4Our Focus
- Reverse Genetics,
- DNA Microarrays,
- expression analysis,
- identifying cis-acting elements,
- Yeast-2-Hybrid,
- Mass Spectometry.
5Nature Reviews Genetics
6Yeasteukaryote model organism
- Eukaryote
- mitochondria,
- organelles,
- cell cycle, etc.
- Eukaryote Plus
- haploid, diploid,
- extra-chromosomal DNA.
Saccharomyces cerevisiae Bakers Yeast
7Yeast Genome Project
- Yeast Genome Project finished in 1996,
- 1.2 x 107 DNA base pairs,
- 16 chromosomes, 230 kb - 2, 352 kb,
- 6,000 Open Reading Frames (ORFs),
- Only 4 of the genes have introns,
- gt 70 of the genome is coding.
8Yeast Genome Projectvs. human genome
- 12.1 Mb Genomic DNA sequence (Human, 3,000 Mb)
- 70 coding sequence (Human, 1.8)
- Few Introns (Humans many)
- 6012 Genes (Human, 30-40,000)
About 70 of the genes found in humans, are found
in yeast.
9Known/Unknown
- 3,780 genes with some characterization
- 560 homologous with other organisms
- 1900 unknown
10Assigning Gene Function
- Biochemist enzymatic function,etc.
- Geneticist gene sequence, expression, etc.
- Cell Biologist cellular location, etc.
- - especially -
- Protein/Protein Interactions
- Protein/DNA interactions
- Etc.
11The Awesome Power of Yeast Genetics
- Homologous Recombination
- Transposons
- Life Cycle
- etc.
12Homologous Recombination
- the replacement of a gene with an exogenous gene
through equal crossing over,
13Transposons
- Transposons whole units of DNA that have the
ability to insert themselves into DNA molecules, - can carry other genes.
14Hologous Recombination and Transposons
- Serve as shuttles to carry experimental DNA
sequences into yeast, - Regulatory sequences (promoters) drive the
expression of, - Reporter Genes code for enzymes that signal
their presence in specific cells, - Epitope Tags code for a foreign protein that
binds to a specific antibody, - etc.
15Yeast Life Cycle
16Reverse Genetics
Function
Classical Genetics
17(No Transcript)
18Transposon Down Sidesrandom can be unsatisfying
- Insertions are essentially generated at random
- it is very difficult to mutagenize all genes
within a genome by transposon mutagenesis alone,
- transposon-specific biases in target-site
selection, - for reasons not fully understood, transposons
such as Tn3 insert non-randomly into certain
regions of target DNA.
19Site Directed Mutagenesis
- Systematic deletion of each ORF in the genome,
- homologous recombination replaces the gene with a
selectable marker, and a DNA barcode, - UPTAG,
- DOWNTAG.
Whole set available1,500
20DNA Microarray
- DNA arrayed at high density on a solid substrate,
- In this experiment, DNA complementary to each ORF
UPTAG and DOWNTAG is arrayed in an ordered
fashion.
Fig. 8-62
http//www.bio.davidson.edu/courses/genomics/chip/
chip.html
21http//www.bio.davidson.edu/courses/genomics/chip/
chip.html
22Conditional Mutants
Conditional Mutants mutants that have observable
phenotypes under a given set of growth conditions.
23DNA Protein Interactions Interactome 1
cont. next page
24DNA Protein Interactions Interactome 1
25Wednesday
- Be ready to describe figures 4 and 5,
- Lectures online at my Course Materials Page.