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Molecular Cell Biology Fifth Edition Chapter 9: Molecular Genetic Techniques and Genomics Copyright © 2004 by W. H. Freeman & Company Harvey Lodish • Arnold Berk • Paul Matsudaira • Chris A. Kaiser • Monty Krieger • Matthew P. Scott • Lawrence Zipursky • James Darnell

Molecular Cell Biology Fifth Edition Chapter 9: Molecular Genetic Techniques and Genomics Copyright © 2004 by W. H. Freeman & Company Harvey Lodish Arnold

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Page 1: Molecular Cell Biology Fifth Edition Chapter 9: Molecular Genetic Techniques and Genomics Copyright © 2004 by W. H. Freeman & Company Harvey Lodish Arnold

Molecular Cell BiologyFifth Edition

Chapter 9:Molecular Genetic Techniques

and Genomics

Copyright © 2004 by W. H. Freeman & Company

Harvey Lodish • Arnold Berk • Paul Matsudaira • Chris A. Kaiser • Monty Krieger • Matthew P. Scott • Lawrence Zipursky •

James Darnell

Page 2: Molecular Cell Biology Fifth Edition Chapter 9: Molecular Genetic Techniques and Genomics Copyright © 2004 by W. H. Freeman & Company Harvey Lodish Arnold

You are going to study the effect of a factor or drug to a human cell line and identify the up-regulation or down-regulation genes.

When your advisor assigns this project to you, how do you approach this problem?

Problems

Page 3: Molecular Cell Biology Fifth Edition Chapter 9: Molecular Genetic Techniques and Genomics Copyright © 2004 by W. H. Freeman & Company Harvey Lodish Arnold

1. What kind of strategy (methods) to approach?

2. What kind of techniques, equipments are you going to use?

3. How can you confirm your gene up- or down-expressed in the cell line?

4. How can you clone these genes?

Issues to be focus (I)

Page 4: Molecular Cell Biology Fifth Edition Chapter 9: Molecular Genetic Techniques and Genomics Copyright © 2004 by W. H. Freeman & Company Harvey Lodish Arnold

5. What kinds of vector you can use?

6. What kinds of library are you going to use, if any. If not, please give your reason?

7. How to study the function of the cloned gene?

8. What methods can you carry out to determine the cloned gene has mutation(s)?

Issues to be focus (II)

Page 5: Molecular Cell Biology Fifth Edition Chapter 9: Molecular Genetic Techniques and Genomics Copyright © 2004 by W. H. Freeman & Company Harvey Lodish Arnold

1 What kind of strategy (methods) to approach?

2. What kind of techniques, equipments are you going to use?

3. How can you confirm your gene aberrantly or normally expressed in the cell line?

4.How can you clone this gene?

Issues to be focus (I)

Page 6: Molecular Cell Biology Fifth Edition Chapter 9: Molecular Genetic Techniques and Genomics Copyright © 2004 by W. H. Freeman & Company Harvey Lodish Arnold
Page 7: Molecular Cell Biology Fifth Edition Chapter 9: Molecular Genetic Techniques and Genomics Copyright © 2004 by W. H. Freeman & Company Harvey Lodish Arnold
Page 8: Molecular Cell Biology Fifth Edition Chapter 9: Molecular Genetic Techniques and Genomics Copyright © 2004 by W. H. Freeman & Company Harvey Lodish Arnold
Page 9: Molecular Cell Biology Fifth Edition Chapter 9: Molecular Genetic Techniques and Genomics Copyright © 2004 by W. H. Freeman & Company Harvey Lodish Arnold
Page 10: Molecular Cell Biology Fifth Edition Chapter 9: Molecular Genetic Techniques and Genomics Copyright © 2004 by W. H. Freeman & Company Harvey Lodish Arnold

1 What kind of strategy (methods) to approach?

2. What kind of techniques, equipments are you going to use?

3. How can you confirm your gene aberrantly or normally expressed in the cell line?

4.How can you clone this gene?

Issues to be focus (I)

Page 11: Molecular Cell Biology Fifth Edition Chapter 9: Molecular Genetic Techniques and Genomics Copyright © 2004 by W. H. Freeman & Company Harvey Lodish Arnold

Blotting Techniques Northern Blotting

RNA run on a gel, probed with complementary DNA or RNA probe

for studying the (mRNA) expression of genes can determine size of mRNA

Western Blotting Protein run on a gel, probed with specific

antibody for studying expression, size of proteins

Page 12: Molecular Cell Biology Fifth Edition Chapter 9: Molecular Genetic Techniques and Genomics Copyright © 2004 by W. H. Freeman & Company Harvey Lodish Arnold

Southern, Northern, Western Blotting Compared

Page 13: Molecular Cell Biology Fifth Edition Chapter 9: Molecular Genetic Techniques and Genomics Copyright © 2004 by W. H. Freeman & Company Harvey Lodish Arnold
Page 14: Molecular Cell Biology Fifth Edition Chapter 9: Molecular Genetic Techniques and Genomics Copyright © 2004 by W. H. Freeman & Company Harvey Lodish Arnold

http://www.nobel.se/chemistry/laureates/1993/mullis-autobio.html

Mullis, K.B. (1990) The unusual origin of the polymerase chain reaction. Scientific American. 262 (4) 56-65.

devised by Kary Mullis c1983

POLYMERASE CHAIN REACTION - PCR

A 'licence' to do molecular biology

A key central technique that has revolutionised molecular and consequently cell biology

Page 15: Molecular Cell Biology Fifth Edition Chapter 9: Molecular Genetic Techniques and Genomics Copyright © 2004 by W. H. Freeman & Company Harvey Lodish Arnold

Polymerase Chain Reaction (PCR)

•PCR is an in vitro technique for the amplification of a region of DNA which lies between two regions of known sequence.

•PCR amplification is achieved by using oligonucleotide primers.

•These are typically short, single stranded oligonucleotides which are complementary to the outer regions of known sequence.

Page 16: Molecular Cell Biology Fifth Edition Chapter 9: Molecular Genetic Techniques and Genomics Copyright © 2004 by W. H. Freeman & Company Harvey Lodish Arnold

The steps of:

1. Template denaturation

2. Primer annealing

3. Primer extension

http://wine1.sb.fsu.edu/bch5425/lect22/lect22.htm

Page 17: Molecular Cell Biology Fifth Edition Chapter 9: Molecular Genetic Techniques and Genomics Copyright © 2004 by W. H. Freeman & Company Harvey Lodish Arnold

CYCLING PARAMETERS

Denaturation; 93°C - 95°C

30 secs – 1min

Annealing; 37°C - 65°C

30 secs – 1min depends on the duplex

Extension; 72°C

1min (+ 30secs per 500bp DNA)

25-35 cycles

Final extension 2-10mins

Page 18: Molecular Cell Biology Fifth Edition Chapter 9: Molecular Genetic Techniques and Genomics Copyright © 2004 by W. H. Freeman & Company Harvey Lodish Arnold

PCR Agarose gel electrophoresis

The final product UV visualisation

3-4 hours

Page 19: Molecular Cell Biology Fifth Edition Chapter 9: Molecular Genetic Techniques and Genomics Copyright © 2004 by W. H. Freeman & Company Harvey Lodish Arnold

PCR based method

Page 20: Molecular Cell Biology Fifth Edition Chapter 9: Molecular Genetic Techniques and Genomics Copyright © 2004 by W. H. Freeman & Company Harvey Lodish Arnold

Quantitative reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction (Q-RT-PCR, or real-time -RT-PCR )

Page 21: Molecular Cell Biology Fifth Edition Chapter 9: Molecular Genetic Techniques and Genomics Copyright © 2004 by W. H. Freeman & Company Harvey Lodish Arnold
Page 22: Molecular Cell Biology Fifth Edition Chapter 9: Molecular Genetic Techniques and Genomics Copyright © 2004 by W. H. Freeman & Company Harvey Lodish Arnold

TaqMan Q-PCR

Page 23: Molecular Cell Biology Fifth Edition Chapter 9: Molecular Genetic Techniques and Genomics Copyright © 2004 by W. H. Freeman & Company Harvey Lodish Arnold

Real-time Quantitative PCR (Applied Biosystems: 7900HT)

Page 24: Molecular Cell Biology Fifth Edition Chapter 9: Molecular Genetic Techniques and Genomics Copyright © 2004 by W. H. Freeman & Company Harvey Lodish Arnold

1 What kind of strategy (methods) to approach?

2. What kind of core facility (or techniques, equipments) are you going to use?

3. How can you confirm your gene aberrantly or normally expressed in the cell line?

4.How can you clone this gene?

Issues to be focus (I)

Page 25: Molecular Cell Biology Fifth Edition Chapter 9: Molecular Genetic Techniques and Genomics Copyright © 2004 by W. H. Freeman & Company Harvey Lodish Arnold

5. What kinds of vector you can use?

6. What kinds of library are you going to use, if any. If not, please give your reason?

7. How to study the function of the cloned gene?

8. What methods can you carry out to determine the cloned gene has mutation?

Issues to be focus (II)

Page 26: Molecular Cell Biology Fifth Edition Chapter 9: Molecular Genetic Techniques and Genomics Copyright © 2004 by W. H. Freeman & Company Harvey Lodish Arnold

Clone by RT-PCR

Page 27: Molecular Cell Biology Fifth Edition Chapter 9: Molecular Genetic Techniques and Genomics Copyright © 2004 by W. H. Freeman & Company Harvey Lodish Arnold
Page 28: Molecular Cell Biology Fifth Edition Chapter 9: Molecular Genetic Techniques and Genomics Copyright © 2004 by W. H. Freeman & Company Harvey Lodish Arnold

Different Cloning Vectors for Different Applications

Sizes of inserted DNA commonly obtained with different cloning vectors

Cloning Vector

Standard high copy number plasmid

Bacteriophage

Cosmid

Bacteriophage P1

PAC (P1 Artificial Chromosome)

BAC (Bacterial Artificial Chromosome)

YAC (Yeast Artificial Chromosome)

Size of insert (kb)

≤ 10

9-23

30-44

70-100

130-150

≤ 300

0.2-2000

Page 29: Molecular Cell Biology Fifth Edition Chapter 9: Molecular Genetic Techniques and Genomics Copyright © 2004 by W. H. Freeman & Company Harvey Lodish Arnold

Plasmid-Based Cloning Vectors Naturally occurring plasmids must be modified in

order to be used as cloning vectors

Insertion of a multiple cloning site (MCS) polylinker ≈ 30bp synthetic sequence with recognition sites

for several common restriction enzymes .

Insertion of an antibiotics resistance gene for selection in transformed bacterial cells growing in selective medium

Page 30: Molecular Cell Biology Fifth Edition Chapter 9: Molecular Genetic Techniques and Genomics Copyright © 2004 by W. H. Freeman & Company Harvey Lodish Arnold

Plasmid vectors Plasmid vector is: a small, self-reproducing piece of circular

DNA found outside of the chromosome. the simplest bacterial vector that is used as a

vehicle to carry foreign DNA sequences into E. coli or another host cell.

Page 31: Molecular Cell Biology Fifth Edition Chapter 9: Molecular Genetic Techniques and Genomics Copyright © 2004 by W. H. Freeman & Company Harvey Lodish Arnold

PLASMIDS• CIRCULAR DNA MOLECULES

• AUTONOMOUSLY REPLICATING

• SELECTABLE MARKER eg AMP RES

• POLYLINKER OR MCS

= MULTIPLE CLONING SITE

eg pBR322, pUC18

Page 32: Molecular Cell Biology Fifth Edition Chapter 9: Molecular Genetic Techniques and Genomics Copyright © 2004 by W. H. Freeman & Company Harvey Lodish Arnold

Properties of plasmid vectors

Smaller plasmid vectors are preferred for many reasons:

1)the efficiency of transformation is inversely related to the size of the plasmid.

The size becomes a limiting factor when the plasmid exceeds 15 kb.

Page 33: Molecular Cell Biology Fifth Edition Chapter 9: Molecular Genetic Techniques and Genomics Copyright © 2004 by W. H. Freeman & Company Harvey Lodish Arnold

Properties of plasmid vectors

Smaller plasmids can accommodate larger segments of foreign DNA before the efficiency begins to deteriorate.

2) Larger plasmids are more difficult to characterize by restriction mapping.

Page 34: Molecular Cell Biology Fifth Edition Chapter 9: Molecular Genetic Techniques and Genomics Copyright © 2004 by W. H. Freeman & Company Harvey Lodish Arnold

Properties of plasmid vectors

3) The yield of foreign DNA is reduced with larger plasmids because these plasmids replicate to lower copy numbers.

Page 35: Molecular Cell Biology Fifth Edition Chapter 9: Molecular Genetic Techniques and Genomics Copyright © 2004 by W. H. Freeman & Company Harvey Lodish Arnold
Page 36: Molecular Cell Biology Fifth Edition Chapter 9: Molecular Genetic Techniques and Genomics Copyright © 2004 by W. H. Freeman & Company Harvey Lodish Arnold
Page 37: Molecular Cell Biology Fifth Edition Chapter 9: Molecular Genetic Techniques and Genomics Copyright © 2004 by W. H. Freeman & Company Harvey Lodish Arnold

Selection for Recombinant Bacterial Clones

The vector used must harbour a suitable marker gene whose activity in the target cell can facilitate the identification of cells carrying it 1. Antibiotic resistance-conferring

markers Unmodified (wild-type) host must

be sensitive the the chosen antibiotic

Ampicillin Tetracycline Chloramphenicol

Page 38: Molecular Cell Biology Fifth Edition Chapter 9: Molecular Genetic Techniques and Genomics Copyright © 2004 by W. H. Freeman & Company Harvey Lodish Arnold

PHAGE BACTERIAL VIRUS MAINLY Larger capacity of insert than

PLASMIDS

Page 39: Molecular Cell Biology Fifth Edition Chapter 9: Molecular Genetic Techniques and Genomics Copyright © 2004 by W. H. Freeman & Company Harvey Lodish Arnold
Page 40: Molecular Cell Biology Fifth Edition Chapter 9: Molecular Genetic Techniques and Genomics Copyright © 2004 by W. H. Freeman & Company Harvey Lodish Arnold
Page 41: Molecular Cell Biology Fifth Edition Chapter 9: Molecular Genetic Techniques and Genomics Copyright © 2004 by W. H. Freeman & Company Harvey Lodish Arnold

5. What kinds of vector you can use?

6. What kinds of library are you going to use, if any. If not, please give your reason?

7. How to study the function of the cloned gene?

8. What methods can you carry out to determine the cloned gene has mutation?

Issues to be focus (II)

Page 42: Molecular Cell Biology Fifth Edition Chapter 9: Molecular Genetic Techniques and Genomics Copyright © 2004 by W. H. Freeman & Company Harvey Lodish Arnold

TO CLONE A GENE from library

MAKE A LIBRARY IN A VECTOR LIBRARY = REPRESENTATIVE

COLLECTION OF DNA FRAGMENTS

Page 43: Molecular Cell Biology Fifth Edition Chapter 9: Molecular Genetic Techniques and Genomics Copyright © 2004 by W. H. Freeman & Company Harvey Lodish Arnold
Page 44: Molecular Cell Biology Fifth Edition Chapter 9: Molecular Genetic Techniques and Genomics Copyright © 2004 by W. H. Freeman & Company Harvey Lodish Arnold
Page 45: Molecular Cell Biology Fifth Edition Chapter 9: Molecular Genetic Techniques and Genomics Copyright © 2004 by W. H. Freeman & Company Harvey Lodish Arnold
Page 46: Molecular Cell Biology Fifth Edition Chapter 9: Molecular Genetic Techniques and Genomics Copyright © 2004 by W. H. Freeman & Company Harvey Lodish Arnold
Page 47: Molecular Cell Biology Fifth Edition Chapter 9: Molecular Genetic Techniques and Genomics Copyright © 2004 by W. H. Freeman & Company Harvey Lodish Arnold
Page 48: Molecular Cell Biology Fifth Edition Chapter 9: Molecular Genetic Techniques and Genomics Copyright © 2004 by W. H. Freeman & Company Harvey Lodish Arnold
Page 49: Molecular Cell Biology Fifth Edition Chapter 9: Molecular Genetic Techniques and Genomics Copyright © 2004 by W. H. Freeman & Company Harvey Lodish Arnold
Page 50: Molecular Cell Biology Fifth Edition Chapter 9: Molecular Genetic Techniques and Genomics Copyright © 2004 by W. H. Freeman & Company Harvey Lodish Arnold
Page 51: Molecular Cell Biology Fifth Edition Chapter 9: Molecular Genetic Techniques and Genomics Copyright © 2004 by W. H. Freeman & Company Harvey Lodish Arnold
Page 52: Molecular Cell Biology Fifth Edition Chapter 9: Molecular Genetic Techniques and Genomics Copyright © 2004 by W. H. Freeman & Company Harvey Lodish Arnold

SCREENING

1) COMPLEMENTATION/DNA HYBRIDISATION

2) ANTIBODY/EXPRESSION LIBRARY

Page 53: Molecular Cell Biology Fifth Edition Chapter 9: Molecular Genetic Techniques and Genomics Copyright © 2004 by W. H. Freeman & Company Harvey Lodish Arnold
Page 54: Molecular Cell Biology Fifth Edition Chapter 9: Molecular Genetic Techniques and Genomics Copyright © 2004 by W. H. Freeman & Company Harvey Lodish Arnold
Page 55: Molecular Cell Biology Fifth Edition Chapter 9: Molecular Genetic Techniques and Genomics Copyright © 2004 by W. H. Freeman & Company Harvey Lodish Arnold
Page 56: Molecular Cell Biology Fifth Edition Chapter 9: Molecular Genetic Techniques and Genomics Copyright © 2004 by W. H. Freeman & Company Harvey Lodish Arnold

5. What kinds of vector you can use?

6. What kinds of library are you going to use, if any. If not, please give your reason?

7. How to study the function of the cloned gene?

8. What methods can you carry out to determine the cloned gene has mutation?

Issues to be focus (II)

Page 57: Molecular Cell Biology Fifth Edition Chapter 9: Molecular Genetic Techniques and Genomics Copyright © 2004 by W. H. Freeman & Company Harvey Lodish Arnold
Page 58: Molecular Cell Biology Fifth Edition Chapter 9: Molecular Genetic Techniques and Genomics Copyright © 2004 by W. H. Freeman & Company Harvey Lodish Arnold
Page 59: Molecular Cell Biology Fifth Edition Chapter 9: Molecular Genetic Techniques and Genomics Copyright © 2004 by W. H. Freeman & Company Harvey Lodish Arnold

Reverse Genetics

FunctionSequence

ESTSGENOMIC DNA

Gene Disruption

Homologous recombinationOverexpression

Anti-sense“RNAi”

Phenotype

GeneticsBiochemistryPhysiology

Page 60: Molecular Cell Biology Fifth Edition Chapter 9: Molecular Genetic Techniques and Genomics Copyright © 2004 by W. H. Freeman & Company Harvey Lodish Arnold

How to study gene function?

Genetic

Gene knock-out

Page 61: Molecular Cell Biology Fifth Edition Chapter 9: Molecular Genetic Techniques and Genomics Copyright © 2004 by W. H. Freeman & Company Harvey Lodish Arnold

How to study gene function?

Epigenetic

antisense oligonucleotide RNAi

Page 62: Molecular Cell Biology Fifth Edition Chapter 9: Molecular Genetic Techniques and Genomics Copyright © 2004 by W. H. Freeman & Company Harvey Lodish Arnold

                                                                                                          

           

Formation of antisense RNA blocks translation

Page 63: Molecular Cell Biology Fifth Edition Chapter 9: Molecular Genetic Techniques and Genomics Copyright © 2004 by W. H. Freeman & Company Harvey Lodish Arnold

RNA interference (RNAi)

• A phenomenon in which small interfering RNA (siRNA) specifically suppresses the expression of target protein by degrading the target mRNA.

Page 64: Molecular Cell Biology Fifth Edition Chapter 9: Molecular Genetic Techniques and Genomics Copyright © 2004 by W. H. Freeman & Company Harvey Lodish Arnold

Transgenic mice

Gene overexpression

Page 65: Molecular Cell Biology Fifth Edition Chapter 9: Molecular Genetic Techniques and Genomics Copyright © 2004 by W. H. Freeman & Company Harvey Lodish Arnold

Knockout

Page 66: Molecular Cell Biology Fifth Edition Chapter 9: Molecular Genetic Techniques and Genomics Copyright © 2004 by W. H. Freeman & Company Harvey Lodish Arnold
Page 67: Molecular Cell Biology Fifth Edition Chapter 9: Molecular Genetic Techniques and Genomics Copyright © 2004 by W. H. Freeman & Company Harvey Lodish Arnold
Page 68: Molecular Cell Biology Fifth Edition Chapter 9: Molecular Genetic Techniques and Genomics Copyright © 2004 by W. H. Freeman & Company Harvey Lodish Arnold

Conditional Knockout

Page 69: Molecular Cell Biology Fifth Edition Chapter 9: Molecular Genetic Techniques and Genomics Copyright © 2004 by W. H. Freeman & Company Harvey Lodish Arnold
Page 70: Molecular Cell Biology Fifth Edition Chapter 9: Molecular Genetic Techniques and Genomics Copyright © 2004 by W. H. Freeman & Company Harvey Lodish Arnold

5. What kinds of vector you can use?

6. What kinds of library are you going to use, if any. If not, please give your reason?

7. How to study the function of the cloned gene?

8. What methods can you carry out to determine the cloned gene has mutation?

Issues to be focus (II)

Page 71: Molecular Cell Biology Fifth Edition Chapter 9: Molecular Genetic Techniques and Genomics Copyright © 2004 by W. H. Freeman & Company Harvey Lodish Arnold

DNA SEQUENCING TWO METHODS 1The chemical degradation method

Maxam & Gilbert

2 The dideoxy method – also called the chain termination or Sanger method invented by Sanger, Smith & Coulson in

early 70s

Page 72: Molecular Cell Biology Fifth Edition Chapter 9: Molecular Genetic Techniques and Genomics Copyright © 2004 by W. H. Freeman & Company Harvey Lodish Arnold

To Perform Sequencing PRIMER/TEMPLATE MIX DISTRIBUTED TO

FOUR TUBES 4 dNTPs PLUS DNA POLYMERASE A RADIOACTIVE dNTP IN ONE OF FOUR TUBES ADD ddA IN A SECOND ADD ddC THIRD ddG FOURTH ddT

Page 73: Molecular Cell Biology Fifth Edition Chapter 9: Molecular Genetic Techniques and Genomics Copyright © 2004 by W. H. Freeman & Company Harvey Lodish Arnold
Page 74: Molecular Cell Biology Fifth Edition Chapter 9: Molecular Genetic Techniques and Genomics Copyright © 2004 by W. H. Freeman & Company Harvey Lodish Arnold
Page 75: Molecular Cell Biology Fifth Edition Chapter 9: Molecular Genetic Techniques and Genomics Copyright © 2004 by W. H. Freeman & Company Harvey Lodish Arnold
Page 76: Molecular Cell Biology Fifth Edition Chapter 9: Molecular Genetic Techniques and Genomics Copyright © 2004 by W. H. Freeman & Company Harvey Lodish Arnold