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BIOTECHNOLOGY Agenda: 1. Viruses Quiz 2. Biotechnology Notes 3. HW: Cloning Webquest •Genomes vary in size •Size ≠ Complexity •Nematodes and Humans 20,000-21,000 genes •Only a tiny part of human DNA codes for genes 1.5% •Transposable elements move around interrupt normal gene func. •Raw material for natural selection and genetic diversity •Multigene families •Similar genes, func. diff. times of development •Embryonic and Fetal HBG vs. Adult •∆ Affinity for oxygen over time, Inc. transfer mother > fetus •Highly conserved genes, Keys to evolution, Hints at relatedness •Example: Spatial arrangement of limbs •Homeobox 180 nucleotides widely conserved, many species BIOTECHNOLOGY Background Genetic Engineering: Process of manipulating genes Biotechnology: Manipulate organisms for useful purposes Recombinant DNA: Artificial, different sources (maybe diff. organisms) Plasmid: Small circular loop of DNA, outside of the main chromosome Bioinformatics: Use computers to sort through data TERMS TO KNOW Terminology Picked up from the environment or conjugation. Can copy themselves independent of Bacterial Chromosome SO there can be hundreds in the bacteria Contain few genes. Not essential to everyday living. BUT! Bacteria will tolerate them because they are helpful during stressful conditions. -Antibiotic resistance -Digest unusual substances -Kill off other bacteria PLASMIDS Side Note: Where do plasmids come from? Why are they there? Restriction Enzymes: Cut strands at specific locations called restriction sites * Derived from bacteria that used them as a defense mechanism (EcoR1) * Create restriction fragments with at least 1 single stranded end, sticky end * Sticky end can create a H Bond and fuse with another DNA segment (DNA Ligase) TERMS TO KNOW Terminology Continued RESTRICTION ENZYMES Agriculture Improving crop yield Controlling weeds and pests Tolerance to drought, temperature and salt Increasing nutritional qualities Reducing dependence on fertilizers and pesticides Protecting animals against parasites GM Crops disease-resistant Alter timing of fruit production USES OF BIOTECHNOLOGY Medicine Produce antibiotics Effective medicines & have fewer side effects Conducting gene therapy, genetic testing and DNA fingerprinting Vaccines and hormones; insulin is produced this way USES OF BIOTECHNOLOGY Environmental •Microbes to clean up pollution such as coastal oil spills •Biofuels •Treating waste •Engineering plants to remove heavy metals such as arsenic from soil •Detecting, removing and treating toxins in water, air, food and soil USES OF BIOTECHNOLOGY Industry •Developing biocatalysts, such as enzymes, to reduce the environmental impact of industrial processes in chemical manufacturing Cloning Vectors: A DNA molecule that can carry foreign DNA into a host cell and replicate there, typically bacteria are used as the vectors (fast reproduction) Gene of Interest Cut your plasmid and gene of interest with the same restriction enzyme so they both have the same sticky ends. Recombinant DNA CLONING Cloning a Eukaryotic Gene in a Bacterial Plasmid 1. The recombinant DNA > Into Bacterial Cells (Host) 2. Grow bacteria in culture 3. If the bacteria takes up the plasmid = Transformation Plasmids typically contain antibiotic resistance (Amp) 4. Select for the bacteria you want with the plasmid. Those that grow in the presence of the antibiotic have been transformed. CLONING Cloning Continued “Shotgun” approach to cloning In this cloning procedure, no single gene is targeted for cloning The restriction enzymes cuts all pieces that match seq. Creates a genomic library A collection of many bacterial or phage colonies Each clone carries copies of a particular DNA segment from a foreign genome integrated into the vector CLONING Cloning Continued HW: CLONING PACKET Objective: How does DNA technology allow us to study the sequence, expression and function of a gene? BIOTECHNOLOGY TUESDAY 2/23/16 Agenda: 1. Warm-Up Questions and Review 2. Finish Section 20.1: Cloning and Expressing Genes 3. Restriction Enzyme Practice 4. HW: Pre-Lab 8 REVIEW FROM YESTERDAY Review from Yesterday: REVIEW FROM YESTERDAY What are they? Where do they come from? Why are they important? Blunt vs. Sticky Ends??? Palindrome: DNA sequence (4-10 base pairs) that reads same from both directions REVIEW FROM YESTERDAY Where do restriction enzymes come from? REVIEW FROM YESTERDAY Other types of DNA libraries: Nucleic Acid Hybridization: You can screen the recombinant plasmids using radioactive probes that target specific nucleotide sequences Once you have cloned the gene and identified it – you can make many copies of the gene to study it -Gene Seq. -Radioactive Tag Seq. of Genes GGCTAA CCGATT PROBES Once you have your bacteria growing, then what? Expressing Cloned Genes Once a gene has been cloned in host cells, the protein can be produced in large quantities for research. (Example: Insulin) Getting cloned eukaryotic DNA to function in a bacterial host can be challenging. Why? Expressing Cloned Genes To avoid incompatibility: Eukaryotic Vector (Yeast) – Have plasmids and grow easily Can carry a much longer DNA segment than a bacterial plasmid Bacteriophage as a cloning vector. Plasmid Max 12,000 Bp or 12 Kb Phage Max 25 Kb PHAGES Bacteriophage and Biotechnology AMPLIFYING DNA IN VITRO Impure/Scanty DNA Samples Quicker/ More Selective X Errors when copying large amounts Method: 1. Heat - Denature DNA, Unravel 2. Add primers, polymerase, nucleotides – Build complementary strands Uses: PCR Polymerase Chain Reaction – Amplify DNA Seq. Summary 1. Restriction Enzymes 2. Cloning Methods – Vector, In Vitro 3. Types of Vectors – Bacteria, Phage, Yeast Lab 8 Transformation Pre Lab Work •Introduction: •Paragraph 1: •Copy Essential Question •Experimental Design: Ind/Dep Variables, Control •Paragraph 2: •Explain biotechnology and transformation using key terms (ONE PAGE ONLY) •Underline key terms •Do not re-summarize the bkgrnd or chapter •Answer PreLab Questions •Read over Safety Thoroughly •Copy the Procedure (Will provide extra copy AT BENCH) •There will be a short pre-lab quiz. • No food/drink/phones in the lab. RESTRICTION ENZYME ACTIVITY