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Molecular Tools for Studying GENES AND GENE ACTIVITY
Typology: Summaries
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Molecular Tools for Studying GENES AND GENE ACTIVITY Molecular Separations Gel electrophoresis ● It is very often necessary in molecular biology research to separate proteins or nucleic acids from each other. ● For example, we may need to purify a particular enzyme from a crude cellular extract in order to use it or to study its properties. ● Gel electrophoresis uses a gel as an anticonvective medium or sieving medium during electrophoresis, the movement of a charged particle in an electric current. ● This is a horizontal gel made of agarose. The agarose melts at high temperature, then gels as it cools. ● A “comb” is inserted into the molten agarose; after the gel cools, the comb is removed, leaving slots, or wells. ● The DNA is then placed in the wells, and an electric current is run through the gel. ● Because the DNA is an acid, it is negatively charged at neutral pH and electrophoreses, or migrates, toward the positive pole, or anode. ● A photograph of a gel after electrophoresis showing the DNA fragments as bright bands. ● DNA binds to a dye that fluoresces orange under ultraviolet light, but the bands appear pink in this photograph. Determining the Size of a Large DNA by Gel Electrophoresis ● 01. The relationship between the log of a DNA’s size and its ● electrophoretic mobility deviates strongly from linearity if the ● DNA is very large. ● 02. Double-stranded DNA is a relatively rigid rod—very long and thin. The longer it is, the more fragile it is. In fact, large ● DNAs break very easily; even seemingly mild manipula tions, like swirling in a beaker or pipetting, create shearing forces sufficient to fracture them. Pulsed-Field Gel Electrophoresis ● A kind of gel electrophoresis that can separate DNA molecules up to several million base pairs (megabases, Mb) long and maintain a relatively linear relationship between the log of their sizes and their mobilities ● Instead of a constant current through the gel, this method uses pulses of current, with relatively long pulses in the forward direction and shorter pulses in the opposite, or even sideways,direction ● Is valuable for measuring the sizes of DNAs even as large as some of the chromosomes found in yeast. Polyacrylamide Gel Electrophoresis ● Electrophoresis is also often applied to proteins, in which case the gel is usually made of polyacrylamide. ● To determine the polypeptide makeup of a complex protein, the experimenter must treat the protein so that the polypeptides, or subunits, will electrophorese independently ● This is usually done by treating the protein with a detergent (sodium dodecyl sulfate, or SDS) to denature the subunits so they no long SDS Advantages ● 1. It coats all the polypeptides with negative charges, so they all electrophorese toward the anode. ● 2. It masks the natural charges of the subunits, so they all electrophorese according to their molecular masses and not by their native charges. Small polypeptides fit easily through the pores in the gel, so they migrate rapidly. Larger polypeptides migrate more slowly Two-Dimensional Gel Electrophoresis ● The mixture of proteins is electrophoresed through a narrow tube gel containing molecules called ampholytes that set up a pH gradient from one end of the tube to the other. ● A negatively charged molecule will electrophorese toward the anode until it reaches its isoelectric point, the pH at which it has no net charge. ● Without net charge, it is no longer drawn toward the anode, or the cathode, for that matter, so it stops. ● This step is called isoelectric focusing because it focuses proteins at their isoelectric points in the gel. ● The gel is removed from the tube and placed at the top of a slab gel for ordinary SDS-PAGE. ● Now the proteins that have been partially resolved by isoelectric focusing are further resolved according to their sizes by SDS-PAGE. ● The investigators grew E. coli cells in the presence or absence of benzoic acid. ● Then they staine dalysate of the cells grown in the absence of benzoic acid with the red fluorescent dye Cy3, so the proteins from that lysate would fluoresce red. ● They stained a lysate of the cells grown in the presence of benzoic acid with the blue fluorescent dye Cy5, so those proteins would fluoresce blue. They performed two dimensional gel electrophoresis is on: ● 1. The proteins from cells grown in the absence of benzoicacid ● 2, On the proteins grown in the presence of benzoic acid ● 3. The proteins that accumulate only in the absence of benzoic acid fluoresce red, those that accumulate only in the presence of benzoic acid fluoresce blue, and those that accumulate under both conditions fluoresce both red and blue, and so appear purple or black. Ion-Exchange Chromatography ● Ion-exchange chromatography uses resin to separate substances, including proteins, according to their charges. ● Positively charged resins like DEAE-Sephadex are used for anion-exchange chromatography, and negatively charged resins like phosphocellulose are used for cation-exchange chromatography Gel Filtration Chromatography ● Gel filtration chromatography is one method that separates molecules based on their physical dimensions. ● Gel filtration resins such as Sephadex are porous beads of various sizes that can be likened to “whiffle balls,” hollow plastic balls with holes in them. ● Gel filtration chromatography uses columns filled with porous resins that let in smaller substances, but exclude larger ones. Thus, the smaller substances are slowed in their journey through the column, but larger substances travel relatively rapidly through the column. Affinity Chromatography ● The resin contains a substance (an affinity reagent) to which the molecule of interest has strong and specific affinity. ● The power of affinity chromatography lies in the specificity of binding between the affinity reagent on the resin and the molecule to be purified. ● The molecule of interest binds to a column coupled to the affinity reagent but all or most other molecules flow through without binding. Then the molecule of interest can be eluted from the column with a solution of a substance that disrupts the specific binding.
Labeled Tracers Autoradiography ● Autoradiography is a means of detecting radioactive compounds with a photographic emulsion. The form of emulsion favored by molecular biologists is a piece of x-ray film. ● To enhance the sensitivity of autoradiography, at least with 32P, one can use an intensifying screen. This is a screen coated with a compound that fluoresces when it is excited by b electrons at low temperature. ● To measure the exact amount of radioactivity in a fragment of DNA, one can get a rough estimate by looking at the intensity of a band on an autoradiograph, and an even better estimate by scanning the autoradiograph with a densitometer Phosphorimaging It is much more accurate in quantifying the amount of radioactivity in a substance. This is because its response to radioactivity is far more linear than that of an x-ray film. False color phosphorimager scan of an RNA blot. After hybridizing a radioactive probe to an RNA blot and washing away unhybridized probe, the blot was exposed to a phosphorimager plate. The plate collected energy from β electrons from the radioactive probe bound to the RNA bands, then gave up this energy when scanned with a laser. A computer converted this energy into an image in which the colors correspond to radiation intensity according to the following color scale: yellow (lowest) , purple, magenta, light blue, green, dark blue, black (highest) Liquid Scintillation Counting ● Uses the radioactive emissions from a sample to create photons of visible light that a photomultiplier tube can detect. ● Liquid scintillation counter is an instrument that lowers the vial into a dark chamber with a photomultiplier tube. Nonradioactive Tracers ● A nonradioactive tracer can compete with the sensitivity of a radioactive by using the multiplier effect of an enzyme. An enzyme is coupled to a probenthat detects the molecule of interest, so the enzyme will produce manynmolecules of product, thus amplifying the signal. ● To avoid the expense of a phosphorimager or x-ray film, one can use enzyme substrates that change color instead of becoming chemiluminescent. These chromogenic substrates produce colored bands corresponding to the location of the enzyme and, therefore, to the location of the molecule of interest. Nucleic Acid Hybridization Southern Blots: Identifying Specific DNA Fragments ● Begins by using a restriction enzyme to cut genomic DNA isolated from the organism. It is best to use a restriction enzyme such as EcoRI or HindIII that recognizes a 6-bp cutting site. ● Edward Southern was the pioneer of this technique; he transferred, or blotted, DNA fragments from an agarose gel to nitrocellulose by diffusion ● Labeled DNA (or RNA) probes can be used to hybridize to DNAs of the same, or very similar, sequence on a Southern blot. The number of bands that hybridize to a short probe gives an estimate of the number of closely related genes in an organism. Southern Blotting ● First, electrophorese DNA fragments in an agarose gel ● Next, denature the DNA with base and transfer the single-stranded DNA fragments from the gel (yellow) to a sheet of nitrocellulose or another DNAbinding material (red) ● One can do this in two ways: ○ 1. Diffusion ○ 2. Electrophoresis ● Next, hybridize the blot to a labeled probe and detect the labeled bands by autoradiography or phosphorimaging. DNA Fingerprinting and DNA Typing ● Alec Jeffreys and his colleagues in 1985 were investigating a DNA fragment from the gene for a human blood protein, a-globin, when they discovered that this fragment contained a sequence of bases repeated several times. This kind of repeated DNA is called a minisatellite. ● Because individuals differ in the pattern of repeats of the basic sequence. These patterns are like fingerprints; indeed, they are called DNA fingerprints. ● A DNA fingerprint is really just a Southern blot. To make one, investigators first cut the DNA under study with a restriction enzyme such as HaeIII. DNA Fingerprinting (a) First, cut the DNA with a restriction enzyme. In this case, the enzyme HaeIII cuts the DNA in seven places (short arrows), generating eight fragments. Only three of these fragments (labeled A, B, and C according to size) contain the minisatellites, represented by blue boxes. The other fragments (yellow) contain unrelated DNA sequences. (b) Electrophorese the fragments from part (a), which separates them according to their sizes. All eight fragments are present in the electrophoresis gel, but they remain invisible. The positions of all the fragments,including the three (A, B, and C) with minisatellites are indicated by dotted lines. (c) Denature the DNA fragments and Southern blot them (d) Hybridize the DNA fragments on the Southern blot to a labeled DNA with several copies of the minisatellite. This probe will bind to the three fragments containing the minisatellites, but with no others. Finally, use x-ray film or phosphorimaging to detect the three labeled bands. Forensic Uses of DNA Fingerprinting and DNA Typing ● Although almost all individuals have different patterns, parts of the pattern(sets of bands) are inherited in a Mendelian fashion. Thus, fingerprints can be used to establish parentage. ● DNA fingerprinting has the potential to identify criminals. This is because a person’s DNA fingerprint is, in principle, unique, just like a traditional fingerprint. ● Forensic scientists have developed probes that hybridize to a single DNA locus that varies from one individual to another, rather than to a whole set of DNA loci as in a classical DNA fingerprint. Use of DNA typing to help identify a rapist Two suspects have been accused of attacking and raping a young woman, and DNA analyses have been performed on various samples from the suspects and the woman. Lanes 1, 5, and 9 contain marker DNAs. Lane 2 contains DNA from the blood cells of suspect A. Lane 3 contains DNA from a semen sample found on the woman’s clothing.
● Specific transcripts can be identified by their hybridization to known DNAs on dot blots. The run-on assay can also be used to determine the effects of assay conditions on nuclear transcription. REPORTER GENE TRANSCRIPTION ● Place a surrogate reporter gene under control of a specific promoter, and then measure the accumulation of the product of this reporter gene. ● Reporter genes have been carefully chosen to have products that are very convenient to assay—more convenient than S1 mapping or primer extension. REPORTER GENES ● lacZ , whose product, b-galactosidase, can be measured using chromogenic substrates such as X-gal, which turns blue on cleavage. ● Cat ○ Bacterial gene ○ Encoding the enzyme chloramphenicol acetyl transferase (CAT) ● Luciferase ○ From firefly lanterns. ○ Mixed with ATP and luciferin, converts the luciferin to a chemiluminescent compound that emits light MEASURING PROTEIN ACCUMULATION IN VIVO ● GENE ACTIVITY: can also be measured by monitoring the accumulation of the ultimate products of genes – proteins ● Done in two ways ○ Immunoblotting (western blotting) ○ Immunoprecipitation IMMUNOPRECIPITATION: ● Begins with labeling proteins in a cell by growing the cells with a labeled amino acid, typically [35S] methionine. ● Typically uses an antibody that will bind specifically to the protein of interest followed with a secondary antibody complexed to protein A on resin beads using a low – speed centrifuge ● The labeled cells are homogenized and a particular labeled protein is bound to a specific antibody or antiserum directed against that protein ● The antibody-protein complex is precipitated with a secondary antibody or protein A coupled to resin beads that can be sedimented in a low-speed centrifuge, or coupled to magnetic beads that can be isolated magnetically. ● The precipitated protein is released from the antibody, electrophoresed, and detected by autoradiography. 5.8 ASSAYING DNA PROTEIN INTERACTIONS FILTER BINDING ● Nitrocellulose membrane filters ○ Have been used for decades to filter – sterilize solutions ○ Can bind DNA but only under certain conditions ○ Single – stranded DNA binds readily to nitrocellulose, but double– stranded DNA by itself does not ○ Proteins does bind ○ Protein bound to double stranded DNA --- protein – DNA complex will bind. GEL MOBILITY SHIFT ● An assay that detects interaction between a protein and DNA by the reduction of the electrophoretic motility of a small DNA that occurs on binding to a protein ● Also known as electrophoretic mobility shift assay (EMSA) ● SUPERSHIFT: the mobility is reduced still further because of the greater mass of protein clinging to the DNA DNase footprinting ● Footprint: A method for detect protein – DNA interactions that can tell where target site lies on the DNA and even which bases are involved in protein binding ● Relies on the fact that a protein, by binding to DNA, covers the binding site and so protects it from attack by DNase. It leaves its “footprint” on the DNA ● End-label the DNA. Either strand can be labeled, but only one strand per experiment ● Footprint represents the region of DNA protected by the protein, and therefore tells where the protein binds. 3 popular methods:
● Is way of discovering whether a given protein is bound to a given gene in chromatin—the DNA–protein complex that is the natural state of DNA in a living cell ● Detects a specific protein–DNA interaction in chromatin in vivo. ● It uses an antibody to precipitate a particular protein in complex with DNA, and PCR to determine whether the protein binds near a particular gene. 5.9 ASSAYING PROTEIN - PROTEIN INTERACTIONS PROTEIN – PROTEIN INTERACTIONS ● Also extremely important in molecular biology ● There are number of ways to assay them ○ Immunoprecipitation ○ Yeast two – hybrid assay ■ takes advantage of two facts ● that transcription activators typically have a DNA-binding ● domain and a transcription activating domain; these two domains have self-contained activities. 5.10 FINDING RNA SEQUENCES THAT INTERACT WITH OTHER MOLECULES SELEX ● (systematic evolution of ligands by exponential enrichment) method that was originally developed To discover short RNA sequences (aptamers) that bind to particular molecules. FUNCTIONAL SELEX ● similar to classical SELEX in that it finds a few “needles” (RNA sequences) in a “haystack” of starting sequence ● But instead of finding aptamers that bind to other molecules, it finds RNA sequences that carry out, or make possible, some function. First functional SELEX procedures ● detected a ribozyme (an RNA with enzymatic activity), and this ribozyme activity altered the RNA itself to allow it to be amplified. 5.11 KNOCKOUTS AND TRANSGENICS TRANSGENIC MICE