Title: Manipulating Proteins, DNA, and RNA
1Chapter 8
- Manipulating Proteins, DNA, and RNA
2- WHY STUDY CELLS IN CULTURE?
- More homogeneous population
- Controlled experimental conditions
- Clonal isolates - a genetically homogeneous
population of cells arising from a single cell - Assumption that response reflects what occurs at
the unicellular level - WHY STUDY MICROORGANISMS LIKE BACTERIA, YEAST,
AND VIRUSES? - Easy and fast - will grow well on minimal medium
(carbon source glucose nitrogen source
ammonium chloride salts) - When grown on a semisolid surface (eg. agar) can
easily generate clonal isolates - viruses have small genomes
3CLONAL GROWTH
Mixed bacterial culture
- Clonal bacterial culture
- all bacteria are genetically identical
4PREPARING A PRIMARY CULTURE OF ANIMAL CELLS
- isolate a fragment of tissue of choice (eg.
skin, muscle - dissect away undesirable tissues and membranes
- mince and digest the extracellular matrix (ECM)
with one or more proteinases (eg. trypsin,
collagenase) - isolate free cells (eg. by filtration or
centrifugation) and plate onto petri dishes under
appropriate growth medium - very rich media- 9 essential amino acids can not
be synthesized by adult vertebrates
H,I,L,K,M,F,A,T,W,V. Medium must also contain
C,Q and Y because these aa are made by
specialized cells in the body and
vitamins-SERUM-non cellular part of blood
5ADVANTAGES and DISADVANTAGES of growing animal
cells in culture
- ADVANTAGES
- allows specific cell types to be studied free of
the influence of surrounding tissues in the
intact animal - provides more control over experimental
conditions - can mimic cell-cell and cell-ECM interactions
seen in tissues - clonal colonies can be generated in 2 weeks
- defined, serum-free medium formulations are
available for some cell types
- DISADVANTAGES
- question of cell behaviour in culture vs. in
tissues - can be difficult to grow or to maintain
consistent growth conditions from one experiment
to another - growth medium is more complex - requires
essential amino acids, vitamins, serum (hormones,
growth factors, etc.)
6ANIMAL CELLS IN CULTURE
Tissue culture flask
Growth medium
Cells
Gelatin or collagen substratum
37oC
5 CO2
7(No Transcript)
8Two classes of animal cell cultures
- PRIMARY CULTURES
- best representation of cell behaviour in normal
tissues - have a finite lifespan (Hayflick limit - undergo
replicative senescence after 50-60 generations
(doublings divisions) - cell types commonly prepared include fibroblasts
(skin), myoblasts (skeletal muscle),
cardiomyocytes (heart)
- TRANSFORMED CELLS
- can grow indefinitely in culture (have acquired
one or more genetic mutations that allow them to
escape senescence - often these cells are less phenotypically
related to the source tissue - some can retain the ability to differentiate
(eg. rodent muscle cell lines) - examples include tumour cell lines (eg. HeLa
cervical cancer cells established in 1952)
9NORMAL AND TRANSFORMED CELLS
EARLY MITOTIC
SENESCENCE
TRANSFORMATION
CARCINOMA
10HYBRID CELL LINES (HETEROKARYONS)
- prepared by fusion of primary cells (human or
mouse) with a transformed rodent (eg. hamster or
mouse) cell line - accomplished by co-incubating the two cell types
with agents that promote cell membrane fusion
(eg. polyethylene glycol (PEG), enveloped
viruses) followed by some form of metabolic
selection provided by the primary cells (eg. HAT
medium hypoxanthine (purine substrate for
salvage pathway to produce guanylate)
aminopterin (an antifolate that blocks the de
novo purine synthetic pathway) thymidine (to
provide for thymidylate synthesis)) - in human-rodent fusions, tendency is for the
cells to lose human chromosomes - growth in
selective medium that requires maintenance of a
particular human chromosome can lead to the
production of somatic cell hybrid panels
containing defined human chromosomes for genetic
mapping - hybridoma immortal cell line that produces a
monoclonal (monospecific) antibody - produced
from fusion of B-lymphocytes isolated from mouse
spleens or lymph nodes (which together produce
polyclonal antibodies following challenge with an
antigen of interest), followed by clonal
expansion and analysis of individual colonies for
the production of the monoclonal antibody of
interest
11Common Cell Types
12Production of Hybrid Cells
13Generation of Monoclonal Antibodies
MOVIE
14Fractionation of Cells
15Velocity and Equilibrium Sedimentation
16Chromatography
17Matrices Used for Chromatography
18Elution Profiles from different matrices
19SDS-PAGE
20SDS-PAGE
21MOVIE
22Isoelectric Focusing
23(No Transcript)
24Peptide Mapping of Proteins
25CENTRAL DOGMA and GENE CLONING
chromosome
5
3
gene
Untranslated region (UTR)
Untranslated region (UTR)
Coding region
5
AAAAAAA
3
mRNA
FUNCTION
protein
26GENE CLONING DNA to PROTEIN
chromosome
MUTATION
DNA
5
3
gene
cDNA
5
AAAAAAA
3
mRNA
FUNCTION
protein
PROTEIN
27DNA CLONING
A method for identifying and purifying a
particular DNA fragment (clone) of interest from
a complex mixture of DNA fragments, and then
producing large numbers of the fragment (clone)
of interest.
28DNA CLONING TOOLS
RESTRICTION ENZYMES VECTORS DNA LIGASE COMPETENT
BACTERIAL CELLS ANTIBIOTICS
29DNA CLONING RESTRICTION ENZYMES
- RESTRICTION ENZYMES Bacterial proteins (enzymes)
that cut DNA molecules at specific sequences
(endonucleases). - restriction site a specific 4- to 8-bp DNA
sequences identified by a restriction enzyme - restriction sites are typically short inverted
repeat sequences - restriction fragment a piece of DNA that is
released from a larger piece of DNA (eg. genomic
DNA) following digestion with one or more
restriction enzymes - several hundred different restriction enzymes
are known, each with its own unique restriction
site
30DNA CLONING RESTRICTION ENZYMES
3
5
HindIII
5
3
31DNA CLONING RESTRICTION ENZYMES OVERHANGS
5
HindIII
3
SmaI
KpnI
32DNA CLONING RESTRICTION MAPS
33DNA CLONING DNA LIGASE
-OH
P-
-P
OH-
2 ATP
DNA ligase ATP
2 AMP 2PPi
34DNA CLONING plasmid vectors
bacterial plasmid
E. coli
origin of replication (ori)
multiple cloning site (MCS) - HindIII - EcoRI -
KpnI - SmaI - BamHI - XbaI
ampicillin resistance gene (amp)
35DNA CLONING TRANSFORMATION
VECTOR
COMPETENT CELLS Chemically treated to enhance
DNA uptake
E. coli
TRANSFORMED BACTERIA
36DNA CLONING SELECTION
Luria Broth Agar Ampicillin
ONLY AMPICILLIN-RESISTANT (PLASMID-CONTAINING)
BACTERIA CAN GROW
37DNA CLONING LARGE SCALE GROWTH
millions of copies of the recombinant plasmid
38DNA CLONING PLASMIDS
- PLASMID A circular double-stranded DNA molecule
that replicates in bacteria and is separate from
the bacterial genome - engineered to contain only sequences needed to
function as a DNA cloning vector - a bacterial origin of replication (ori)
- an antibiotic resistance gene (eg. B-lactamase
confers resistance to ampicillin (amp)) - one or more unique restriction enzyme cutting
sites which can be used to insert a piece of
foreign DNA (MCS) - may contain a B-galactosidase gene that is
interrupted when DNA is inserted into the MCS - may also contain promoters that drive expression
of a foreign gene in either prokaryotic or
eukaryotic cells
39Movie cloning
40cDNAs
41Clone Libraries
42Detection of specific RNA or DNA molecules by
gel-transfer hybridizationslide 1
43Detection of specific RNA or DNA molecules by
gel-transfer hybridizationslide 2
44DNA Sequencing
45Dideoxy-Sequencing (Sanger)
46Dideoxy-Sequencing (Sanger) contd
47Dideoxy-Sequencing (Sanger) contd
48Reading Frames (6)
49Genes are found on either DNA strand
50Polymerase Chain Reaction (PCR) slide 1
51Polymerase Chain Reaction (PCR) slide 2
52Polymerase Chain Reaction (PCR) slide 3
MOVIE
53PCR Genomic or cDNA
54Technology allows you to move from protein to
gene and from gene to protein
55Fusion Proteins for Analysis of Function
56Fluorescence Energy Transfer (FRET)
57Affinity Coupled with Immunoprecipitation Tags
Facilitates the ID of Associated Proteins
58Yeast-Two-Hybrid Assay is used to discover
protein-protein interactions
MOVIE
59To study the function of proteins in vivo one
needs to identify mutants within the gene that
encodes your protein and evaluate the outcome.
Temperature Sensitive (TS) Mutants in Bacteria or
Yeast
60The use of TS-mutants in yeast identified
proteins that played critical roles in the export
of proteins
61Mutations introduce a phenotype
62Single Nucleotide Polymorphisms (SNP) can be used
in Linkage Analysis to identify genes or
Chromosomal regions that are responsible for
inherited disorders
63DNA Microarrays monitor the expression of
thousands of genes in one experiment
MOVIE
64Cluster Analysis used to identify sets of genes
that are coordinately regulated
The expression of 8600 genes (Columns) were
analyzed under 12 time points. Red represents
increase in expression green a decrease relative
to untreated cells.
65Cells can be genetically engineered to carry
different types of mutations
66Embryonic Stem (ES) cells can be genetically
engineered and used to make a new animal
67The genetically engineered ES cells are used to
generate a chimeric animal, which is then used to
make completely ES-derived animals