* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download Ch. 5: Presentation Slides
SNP genotyping wikipedia , lookup
Minimal genome wikipedia , lookup
Comparative genomic hybridization wikipedia , lookup
Point mutation wikipedia , lookup
Genome (book) wikipedia , lookup
Cancer epigenetics wikipedia , lookup
Nutriepigenomics wikipedia , lookup
Human genome wikipedia , lookup
Metagenomics wikipedia , lookup
DNA damage theory of aging wikipedia , lookup
No-SCAR (Scarless Cas9 Assisted Recombineering) Genome Editing wikipedia , lookup
Gel electrophoresis of nucleic acids wikipedia , lookup
Primary transcript wikipedia , lookup
United Kingdom National DNA Database wikipedia , lookup
DNA vaccination wikipedia , lookup
Mitochondrial DNA wikipedia , lookup
Site-specific recombinase technology wikipedia , lookup
Genealogical DNA test wikipedia , lookup
Bisulfite sequencing wikipedia , lookup
Epigenomics wikipedia , lookup
Vectors in gene therapy wikipedia , lookup
Nucleic acid double helix wikipedia , lookup
Nucleic acid analogue wikipedia , lookup
DNA supercoil wikipedia , lookup
Genome editing wikipedia , lookup
Cre-Lox recombination wikipedia , lookup
Genomic library wikipedia , lookup
Cell-free fetal DNA wikipedia , lookup
Genetic engineering wikipedia , lookup
Therapeutic gene modulation wikipedia , lookup
Deoxyribozyme wikipedia , lookup
Designer baby wikipedia , lookup
Molecular cloning wikipedia , lookup
Non-coding DNA wikipedia , lookup
Microevolution wikipedia , lookup
Genome evolution wikipedia , lookup
Extrachromosomal DNA wikipedia , lookup
Artificial gene synthesis wikipedia , lookup
Contents DAY 1: Molecular biology, the basics • Chapter 1: DNA structure and gene expression, nuclear and organel genomes 53 • Chapter 2: DNA replication, PCR, electrophoresis, DNA sequence analysis 33 • Chapter 3: Organel and ITS sequence, DNA databases, phylogenetic analysis 46 • Pract.: DNA BLAST, alignment, phylogeny Molecular techniques in plant breeding, Cantho september 2006 1 Contents DAY 2: Methods for the analysis of DNA polymorphisms • Chapter 4: Recombinant DNA, restriction enzymes, cloning, transformation 21 • Chapter 5: Hybridisation, RFLP, micro-array & SNP analysis 33 • Chapter 6: PCR methods for analysis of DNA polymorphisms 29 Molecular techniques in plant breeding, Cantho september 2006 2 Contents DAY 4: Marker assisted breeding • Feedback on molecular techniques • Chapter 7: The use of molecular markers in breeding 18 • Chapter 8: Fingerprints, diversity analysis, specific markers 19 • Chapter 9: Genetic linkage, genetic maps, Introgression, QTL analysis 42 • Pract.: Demonstration AFLP, SSR, QTL analysis, genetic Molecular techniques inmaps plant breeding, Cantho september 2006 3 Contents DAY 5: Functional genomics, transformation technology • Chapter 10: Plant transformation technology 29 • Chapter 11: Functional genomics 11 • Chapter 12: Transgenic crop plants 31 • Examination Molecular techniques in plant breeding, Cantho september 2006 4 Chapter 1: Genes and genomes DNA structure Genomes Protein structure Gene structure and expression Molecular techniques in plant breeding, Cantho september 2006 5 Cells and DNA Molecular techniques in plant breeding, Cantho september 2006 6 Chromosomes and DNA Molecular techniques in plant breeding, Cantho september 2006 7 DNA: Chemical Composition • Two types of nitrogen-containing bases comprise the chemical structure of DNA: - purines = adenine and guanine, A & G - pyrimidines = thymine and cytosine, T & C Molecular techniques in plant breeding, Cantho september 2006 8 DNA: Chemical Composition • Nucleotides = building blocks of DNA = phosphate + sugar + base • Nucleoside = sugar +base • Sugar = 5 carbon deoxyribose • Phosphodiester bonds link sugar molecules to phosphate groups Molecular techniques in plant breeding, Cantho september 2006 9 Molecular techniques in plant breeding, Cantho september 2006 10 DNA: Chemical Structure • DNA = polynucleotide = a chain of bases • Orientation of sugar-phosphate linkages = 5’ to 3’ as the phosphate attached to the 5’ carbon of one sugar is linked to the 3’ carbon of the next sugar • Purine and pyrimidine bases are linked to the 1’ carbon of sugar Molecular techniques in plant breeding, Cantho september 2006 11 This polarity is extremely important!!!! 5’ end: P 3’ end: OH Molecular techniques in plant breeding, Cantho september 2006 12 DNA: Chemical Structure • DNA consists of two polynucleotide chains which run 5’ to 3’ in opposite directions = antiparallel • DNA chains are held together by hydrogen bonds between bases • DNA bases pair by Chargaff’s rules: - Adenine (A) pairs with Thymine (T) by 2 H-bounds - Guanine (G) pairs with Cytosine (C) by 3 bounds Molecular techniques in plant breeding, Cantho september 2006 13 3’ end: 5’ end: 5’ end: 3’ end: Molecular techniques in plant breeding, Cantho september 2006 14 DNA Sequence: convention 5’ to 3’end, one strand (because other strand is complementary and therefore known also) 5’ 3’ Molecular techniques in plant breeding, Cantho september 2006 15 Genome Size • Complex organisms have large genomes = genetic contents of a cell • Genomic size increases with evolutionary complexity (in general!) • Size of DNA is measured in kb = kilobase pairs • Size of large genomes is measured in Mb = megabase pairs Molecular techniques in plant breeding, Cantho september 2006 16 Genes and genomes • Gene = unique sequence of DNA bases, coding for a protein • Alleles = different variants of a gene in different organisms or on the homologous chromosomes Organism Genome size Gene number E. coli 4.6 Mb 2800 Yeast 12 Mb 6000 Molecular techniques in plant breeding, Cantho september 2006 17 Genes and genomes Organism Genome size Gene number C. elegans 100 Mb 20,000 A. thaliana 120 Mb 26,000 H. sapiens 3,000 Mb 40,000? Z. mays 2,500 Mb 26,000? Salamander 90,000 Mb 30,000? Molecular techniques in plant breeding, Cantho september 2006 18 Genes and genomes Eukaryotic genomes contain much DNA outside the genes Human Yeast Z. mays E. coli Genomes 2 T.A. Brown, Bios Molecular techniques in plant breeding, Cantho september 2006 19 Chromosomes of a human being: 2 copies of each chromosome, ordered by size on a slide 20 Chromosomes and DNA Eukaryotes are diploid (2 homologous chromosomes, with alleles of genes) Eukaryotes have linear chromosomes in their nucleus This picture shows a duplicated chromosome= 2C = 2 identical chromatids, the scheme unravels one of those Molecular techniques in plant breeding, Cantho september 2006 21 Genomes nuclear DNA: From both parents (biparental) Chloroplast (cp) and mitochondrial (mt) DNA: Usually maternal Plant cell Molecular techniques in plant breeding, Cantho september 2006 22 Genomes • Prokaryotes have a circular genome and often also small circles = plasmids • Mitochondria (and chloroplasts) in eukaryotic cells have their own genome = circular (endosymbiont hypothesis) Prokaryote was swallowed by an early eukaryote and degenerated, it now provides energy (mitochondria) or performs photosynthesis (chloroplast) Molecular techniques in plant breeding, Cantho september 2006 23 Mitochondrial genomes • • • • Human: 16 kb Yeast: 84 kb Corn: 570 kb Genes for: rRNA, tRNA proteins for ATP synthesis yeast human Molecular techniques in plant breeding, Cantho september 2006 24 Chloroplast genomes • 120 – 200 kb • Genes voor: rRNA and tRNA RNA polymerase ca. 120 proteins for photosynthesis Molecular techniques in plant breeding, Cantho september 2006 25 Maternal inheritance of mitochondrial DNA Maternal inheritance through egg cytoplasm, no mixing, Molecular techniques in plant breeding, Cantho september 2006 26 no recombination: excellent for lineage analysis Organel DNA for tracing back Mystery of Russian tsar-family: bones in grave could be identified based on comparison of mitochondrial DNA with that of living descendants (through the maternal line). Many copies (many circles per organel, many organels perMolecular cell)techniques of thein plant DNA allow breeding, Canthoefficient september 2006 analysis.27