Title: Molecular Approaches to Nutrition
1Molecular Approaches to Nutrition
- Molecular Biology 2
- Principles and Methods Dr. Janice Drew
2Principles and Methods
- Purification and handling of DNA/RNA
- Gel Electrophoresis
- Nucleic Acid Hybridisation
- Cutting and rejoining DNA
- Methods of introducing DNA into cells
- PCR
- DNA sequencing
- Sequence interpretation
3Handling of DNA/RNA
- DNases and RNases
- Glass and plasticware
- Solutions
4Extraction of DNA/RNA
- DNA extraction
- Alkaline lysis
- Neutralisation
- Precipitation of proteins and cell debris
- Precipitation or elution using spin column
- RNA extraction
- Lysis incorporating instantaneous inactivation of
RNases - Separation of contaminating DNA
- Precipitation or elution using spin column
5Quantitation and analysis of DNA/RNA
- Spectrometric determination at 260nm
- Gel Electrophoresis
- Agilent technology
6Gel Electrophoresis
- Nucleic acids are negatively charged
- PO4- groups
- Electrophoresis resolves by size
- Agarose is the usual gel matrix
- Ethidium bromide/SYBR green stains DNA RNA
- Fluorescent colour under UV illumination
7Agarose Gel Preparation
Agarose fine white powder polysaccharide
(galactose polymer) isolated from seaweed. 1
(w/v) dissolves in Tris-acetate buffer at 60 C
and the solution sets at 30 C
8Agarose Gel Image
9Agilent Technology
10Electropherogram showing Agilent analysis of
total RNA
28S
18S
Fluorescence
Times (seconds)
11Hybridisation - Identification of DNA/RNA
- Agarose gel electrophoresis separates nucleic
acids on the basis of size - does not identify
DNA/RNA fragments - Nucleic acid probes are used to identify specific
DNA/RNA sequences in a gel - Probe is a known nucleic acid sequence
- Relies on the principle of base pairing -
complementary DNA/RNA sequences stick (hybridise)
together
12Hybridisation - Identification of DNA/RNA
- Many molecular biology procedures to identify
specific DNA/RNA sequences use this principle - -
- Southern (DNA) or Northern (RNA) blotting
- In situ hybridisation
- Microarrays
- Antisense technologies
13Probe Production
- Synthesise a known fragment
- OR
- Purify a known fragment of DNA
- Restriction enzyme digestion
- Heat denature to give single strands
- Add primers, DNA polymerase and
radioactive/colour labelled nucleotides - Make a radioactive/ colour labelled complementary
strand - Denature to give single strands
14nylon membrane and transferred DNA
TREAT and BLOT GEL Transfer to nylon membrane
HYBRIDISATION OVEN Incubate filter and probe
in hybridisation buffer
Southern/Northern Blotting and Hybridisation
15Restriction Endonucleases
- Restriction endonucleases cut DNA
- Present in bacteria
- Cut at sequence specific sites
- Usually 4 or 6 base pairs long
- Bacteria use them to destroy foreign DNA
- Bacteria protect their own DNA against
self-cutting by special methylation of their DNA - Restriction enzymes can be purified and are used
in genetic engineering studies
16Restriction Endonucleases
- Example Restriction enzymes
- EcoR I (E. coli Restriction Endonuclease I)
- Stu I (Streptomyces tubercidicus I)
Stu I
EcoR I
Palindromic Axis of rotational symmetry
AGGCCT TCCGGA
5
3
GAATTC CTTAAG
5
3
5
3
5
3
Sticky Ended Blunt Ended
17Molecular Scissors and Glue
- There are 100s of restriction enzymes, each one
with a different recognition site - These enzymes are molecular scissors and can be
used to specifically cut long DNA strands into
smaller pieces - The T4 virus, which infects E. coli, has an
enzyme, T4 DNA ligase, which can form a
phosphodiester bonds between DNA molecules - Purified T4 DNA ligase can be used as molecular
glue to join pieces of DNA. This enzyme is
widely used for DNA cloning
18Ligation of DNA
T4 DNA Ligase
Stu I
EcoR I
OH 3 5 PO4
PO4 5 3OH
T4 DNA Ligase
T4 DNA ligase catalyses the formation of
phosphodiester bonds
19Methods of introducing DNA into cells
- Plasmids
- Viruses
- DNA and RNA viruses
- Phage vectors
20Cloning DNA into Plasmids
- Bacteria have a circular DNA genome
- 5 to 10 million base pairs (bp) in size
- Many bacteria also contain plasmids
- Small circular DNA molecules, 3,000 to 50,000 bp
- Note The bacterial genome is not a plasmid
- Plasmids contain extra genes which are often
vital for the survival of the bacterium - Nutrient metabolism, antibiotic resistance
- Plasmids can be used as vectors in which foreign
DNA can be ligated (cloned)
21A General Laboratory Plasmid
Multiple Cloning Site
A foreign gene can be ligated into a plasmid, and
the genetically engineered plasmid introduced
into E. coli.
22Cloning DNA into a Plasmid
Both plasmid and foreign DNA have sticky EcoR I
ends
Agar plates contain antibiotic. Grow at 37 C
Insertion into E. coli (transformation)
Place 1 colony in liquid media
antibiotic. Grow at 37 C
Purify Plasmid DNA (Billions of copies)
23DNA and Retroviruses can serve as vehicles for
the introduction of new DNA into a cell
24DNA / RNA viruses as vehicles
gene x
Viral DNA
Chromosomal DNA
Integration into genome
Gene Therapy and Transgenics
25Polymerase Chain Reaction (PCR)
- PCR generates multiple copies of DNA
- Heat resistant DNA polymerase used to copy a
section of DNA e.g Taq - Very efficient copying
- Billions of copies from a single template DNA
- Small volume / quick analysis
26Polymerase Chain Reaction (PCR)
- Entire reaction performed in single tube
- 10 to 50 µl volume
- Reaction contains
- Template DNA, heat resistant DNA polymerase, a
pair of specific DNA primers (in excess over the
template), nucleotide bases, appropriate reaction
buffer - Reaction is repeatedly cycled through 3
temperatures (x30) - 95 C (makes DNA single stranded)
- 55 - 60 C (primers anneal to template DNA)
- 72 C DNA polymerase copies DNA, starting from
the primers
27A Thermocycler
This thermocycler can accept 1500 reactions at a
time, and complete them in 2 to 4 hours.
28Principal of PCR
DNA (Double Stranded)
5
3
A
G
C
T
A
G
C
A
T
G
T
T
G
C
G
C
G
T
A
T
C
A
T
G
T
A
C
A
G
T
G
C
A
T
A
C
G
T
C
C
C
C
T
T
A
G
C
T
T
C
G
A
T
C
G
T
A
C
A
A
C
G
C
G
C
A
T
A
G
T
A
C
A
T
G
T
C
A
C
G
T
A
T
G
C
A
G
G
G
G
A
A
T
C
G
A
3
5
Heat Denature (Becomes Single Stranded)
5
3
A
G
C
T
A
G
C
A
T
G
T
T
G
C
G
C
G
T
A
T
C
A
T
G
T
A
C
A
G
T
G
C
A
T
A
C
G
T
C
C
C
C
T
T
A
G
C
T
T
Heat to 72 C
Cool. This allows specific primers to anneal as
shown
o
o
l
t
o
5
5
C
Heat to 72 C. Heat resistant DNA polymerase
extends new DNA from the primers
29DNA Sequencing
- A specific primer binds to denatured DNA
- Heat resistant DNA polymerase extends a new
strand from this primer - Complementary nucleotides are added as
appropriate - In the reaction are small quantities of coloured
dideoxynucleotides - Colours ddTTP ddGTP ddATP ddCTP
- These prevent further additions (terminators)
30Dideoxynucleotides
ddNTPs have no 3 OH, so when added they cannot
form the phosphodiester bond required to add the
next nucleotide
31DNA Sequencing Reaction
- The reaction is boiled to make all the DNA
single stranded and then the reaction is resolved
on a long polyacrylamide or capillary gel in a
DNA sequencer
32Electropherogram of sequencing gel
33Decoding DNA sequence data
34(No Transcript)