Title: Quantitative Measurement How many of each taxa are present
1Quantitative MeasurementHow many of each taxa
are present?
- Methods
- T-RFLP
- FisH
- Real-time PCR
- ARDRA and DGGE also give an idea of which
organisms are most abundant. - WARNING true quantitation is virtually
impossible! - PCR bias leads to unfair representation of
quantity of each species present. -
2T-RFLPTerminal-Random Fragment Length
Polymorphisms
- PCR with fluorescently labelled primers, so all
PCR products have fluorescent terminal. - Digest PCR products with restriction enzymes.
- Run restriction digest on a gel and read with a
laser. - The brighter the signal the more copies of DNA.
- We can identify individual species by checking
T-RFLP pattern of pure culture.
Brightness of Fluor.
Size of fragment
3FisHFluorescence in situ Hybridisation
- Purpose To check whether a particular organism
exists in a - sample and in what proportion.
- 1) Find out the sequence of your organism (from
database). - 2) Make a probe (oligonucleotide) that is
complementary to the RNA of the organism and
label it with fluorescent probe. - 3) Fix your sample on a microscope slide and wash
with labelled probe. - 4) Look down a fluorescence microscope and see in
which cells the fluorescent probe has bound.
4Real-time PCR
- Purpose to quantify the amount of template
that - is amplified in a PCR reaction.
- Can be used to quantify different species present
in a community. - Need Primers specific for the organisms you
want to quantify. - A damned expensive machine that
- measures the PCR product as it is
- amplified.
-
5Systematics/Taxonomy
- Cladistics - discrete character data
- a series of discrete variables (characters) with
multiple character states. - Example in higher organisms - Character 1
toes - character states humans 5 toes
- lions 4 toes
- tigers 4 toes
- Character 2 whiskers
- character states humans absent
- lions present
- tigers present
- Character 3 ears
- character states humans 2 ears
- lions 2 ears
- tigers 2 ears
-
H L T 4 Toes - Whiskers - 2
Ears Tigers and Lions are more closely
related to each other than they are to humans
6Cladistics continued .
- Problem many characters have evolved more than
once in separate lineages e.g. wings in bats and
birds - Molecular Cladistics (Discrete character data)
- examples of characters presence/absence of
gene - presence/absence of RFLP band
- A/G/C/T at a particular position
- Example of Discrete Character Method
- Maximum Parsimony.
-
7Phenetics
- Phenetics - distance data
- a single variable (e.g. DNA hybridisation data)
- Discrete character data can be converted in
distance data, but distance data can not tell us
about discrete characters. - DNA Sequence Data - the percent of base
differences between sequences can put into a
distance matrix. - A B C D
- A 0 10 20 30
- B 0 10 20
- C 0 10
8- A B C D
- A 0 10 20 30
- B 0 20 20
- C 0 20
- A AGGGCCTTAA
- B AGGGCCTTAG
- C AGGGCCTTCC
- D AGGGCCTACG
A B A C C D D B A D
B C
9 A B C DA 0 10 20 30B 0 20 20C 0 20
A B AB CD BD AC 10 20 20 20
70 C D A C AC DB CB AD 20 20 20
30 90 D B A D AD BC DB AC 30
20 20 10 80 B C
10Rooted and Unrooted Trees
A B
A B A B
C D
C D C D
A B C D
A B C D
A B C D
11ROOTED TREE TO SCALE
A B C
D
A B C D A 10 20 30 B
20 20 C
20
12Maths
- Phylogeny is not really all that simple!
- A AGGGCCTTAA
- B AGGGCCTTAG
- We need mathematical algorithms to convert
percentage DIFFERENCE to GENETIC DISTANCE. Also
most trees have more than 4 branches. These
algorithms can be computationally difficult. Get
a computer to do it!!
How do we know that this is one base change? It
could have changed from A to C then C to G