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Beef Cattle Production Management Series (2008) Introduction to Biotechnology Part I Jim Bono, PhD Microbiologist US Meat Animal Research Center Clay Center, NE GPVEC July 31st 2008 Clay Center, NE Overview of Parts I and II Part I Biotechnology, GMOs, and Genetic Engineering Molecular Genetics (DNA, RNA, and Proteins) Part II Applied Molecular Genetics DNA extraction Cloning DNA libraries Polymerase Chain Reaction (PCR) DNA sequencing Single Nucleotide Polymorphism (SNP) Microarrays Biotechnology Biotechnology is the application of scientific techniques to modify and improve plants, animals, and microorganisms to enhance their value. Agricultural biotechnology is the area of biotechnology involving applications to agriculture. Agricultural biotechnology has been practiced for a long time, as people have sought to improve agriculturally important organisms by selection and breeding. An example of traditional agricultural biotechnology is the development of disease-resistant wheat varieties by cross-breeding different wheat types until the desired disease resistance was present in a resulting new variety. http://www.ctahr.hawaii.edu/gmo/intro/ Genetic Engineering & GMO In the 1970s, advances in the field of molecular biology provided scientists with the ability to readily transfer DNA — the chemical building blocks that specify the characteristics of living organisms - between more distantly related organisms. Today, this technology has reached a stage where scientists can take one or more specific genes from nearly any organism, including plants, animals, bacteria, or viruses, and introduce those genes into another organism. This technology is sometimes called genetic engineering. An organism that has been modified, or transformed, using modern biotechnology techniques of genetic exchange is referred to as a genetically modified organism (“GMO”). Roundup herbicide resistance Insect resistance (Bacillus thuringiensis) Insulin production Enviropig (low phosphorus manure - phytate - phytase) http://www.ctahr.hawaii.edu/gmo/intro/ Which bull would be the best sire? Can you tell by their appearance? Which bacteria is pathogenic to humans? Can you tell by their appearance? pathmicro.med.sc.edu www.biology.iupui.edu “Genetic Playbook” www.petecarroll.com http://www.kursus.kvl.dk/shares/vetgen/_Popgen/ge netics/10/10/sld003.htm All living organisms have DNA Genome Genome = all genetic material in a cell Eukaryotes Prokaryotes Chromosomes Chromosome Plasmid/s Deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) Deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) Nucleotides or bases Adenine - A Cytosine - C Guanine - G Thymine - T Deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) Deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) Double Helix Nucleotide or base Major groove Minor groove Phosphate-deoxyribose backbone http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DNA DNA Replication Spontaneous mutation Point mutation Insertion Deletion 1 error per 1,000 bacterial replication cycles Gene A gene is a locatable region of genomic sequence, corresponding to a unit of inheritance, which is associated with regulatory regions, transcribed regions and/or other functional sequence regions. A gene is a union of genomic sequences encoding a coherent set of potentially overlapping functional products". A gene is often used to refer to an inheritable trait which is usually accompanied by a phenotype as in ("tall genes" or "bad genes") Historically: “One gene, one Protein” L0029 L0028 tir cesT eae Gene content of various organisms Species Number of genes Mycoplasma genitalium 500 Streptococcus pneumoniae 2,300 Escherichia coli 4,400 Saccharomyces cerevisiae 5,800 Drosophila melanogaster 13,700 Caenorhabditis elegans 19,000 Sea urchin 23,300 Arabidopsis thaliana 25,500 Homo sapiens 27,000 Mus musculus 29,000 Oryza sativa 50,000 Model Gene Typically, cartoon renderings reflect only the single, “sense” strand, but realize there is always also a complementary strand. TATA (-30) 5’ ATG TAA INTRON * Promoter 5’-UT E I E AATAA 3’-UT * 3’ Coding or Sense strand EXONS (Exons contain protein coding sequence, bacterial genes don’t have introns) * - Transcriptional initiation /termination sites TATA - Promoter element TGA, TAA, TAG - Translational stop codon ATG - Translational start codon AATAA - Polyadenylation signal Protein Biosynthesis GGATCGGCTAGCTG……...CTACATAGCTAT Gene Transcription GGAUCGGCUAAGCUAU mRNA Translation Gly-Ser-AlA-………….. Protein Transcription Making a copy of the gene that can be used for translation Protect the DNA Uracil (U) instead of Thymine (T) RNA polymerase reads the nucleotide sequence of the gene and makes a single stranded messenger RNA (mRNA) http://www.dnai.org/a/index.html Translation Process of making a protein from the mRNA Changing language from nucleotides to amino acids Ribosome is responsible for reading the mRNA and making the protein Translational start – ATG Translational stop – TAA, TGA, TAG 3 nucleotides are called a codon Each codon codes for a specific amino acid – 20 amino acids http://www.dnai.org/a/index.html The Genetic Code DNA Codon mRNA Codon Encoded Amino Acid The Genetic Code Transfer RNA (tRNA) Anti-codon F.W. Nicholas, 1996, Introduction To Veterinary Genetics. Oxford Univ. Press Protein Amino(N)-terminus Carboxyl(C)-terminus DNA synthesized 5’-3’ Protein synthesized amino - carboxyl Eukaryotic Protein Biosynthesis TATA (-30) 5’ ATG TAA AATAA * 3’ * Promoter 5’-UT Gene Exon 1 Intron Exon 2 * 5’ 5’-UT mRNA Exon 1---Exon 2 3’-UT 3’-UT * Transcription (In nucleus) AAAA 3’ Translation (@ ribosomes & tRNA) (In cyctoplasm) N-terminus C-terminus Pre-Protein * - Transcriptional initiation /termination sites TATA - Promoter element ATG - Translational start codon TAA, TGA, TAG - Translational stop codon AATAA - Polyadenylation signal Homework Design you own gene Double stranded DNA Promoter element Transcriptional initiation /termination sites Translational start codon Intron Translational stop codon Polyadenylation signal Homework example Met Pro Ile Gly Asn tataagaagatctaggaaaggagagattt ATG CCT ATT GGT AAC atattcttctagatcctttcctctctaaa TAC GGA TAA CCA TTG Asn Val Leu Gly Stop cttggtcataatccc AAT GTG CTT GGT TAA gaagatctaata gaaccagtattaggg TTA CAC GAA CCA ATT cttctagattat agggatgcatccc tccctacgtaggg Legend tataa – Transcriptional initiation signal taggaaaggagagattt – 5’ UTR ATG – Translational start cttggtcataatccc – intron TAA – Translational termination gaagatct – 3’ UTR aataa – polyadenylation signal Beef Cattle Production Management Series (2008) Introduction to Biotechnology Part II Jim Bono, PhD Microbiologist US Meat Animal Research Center Clay Center, NE GPVEC July 31st 2008 Clay Center, NE Overview of Parts I and II Part I Biotechnology, GMOs, and Genetic Engineering Molecular Genetics (DNA, RNA, and Proteins) Part II Applied Molecular Genetics DNA extraction Cloning DNA libraries Polymerase Chain Reaction (PCR) DNA sequencing Single Nucleotide Polymorphism (SNP) Microarrays DNA extraction Important to have clean DNA for further experiments “dirty” prep can have contaminates that inhibit enzymatic processes Agarose gel electrophoresis Cloning http://www.accessexcellence.org/RC/VL/GG/plasmid.php http://student.britannica.com/comptons/ar t-90884/DNA-sequences-can-be-cut-intwo-ways?&articleTypeId=31 Restriction endonucleases Enzymes that cuts double-stranded DNA following its specific recognition of short nucleotide sequences, known as restriction sites, in the DNA Enzyme Source Recognition Cut Sequence 5'GAATTC 5'---G AATTC---3' 3'CTTAAG 3'---CTTAA G---5' EcoRI Escherichia coli EcoRV* Escherichia coli 5'GATATC 3'CTATAG 5'---GAT 3'---CTA BamHI Bacillus amyloliquefaciens 5'GGATCC 3'CCTAGG 5'---G GATCC---3' 3'---CCTAG G---5' ATC---3' TAG---5' Ligase An enzyme that can link together two DNA strands that have single-strand breaks, i.e. DNA cut with a restriction endonuclease. Cloning http://www.accessexcellence.org/RC/VL/GG/plasmid.php http://student.britannica.com/comptons/ar t-90884/DNA-sequences-can-be-cut-intwo-ways?&articleTypeId=31 DNA libraries Genomic library: Contains entire DNA content of an organism Suitable for determining genomic DNA sequence Requires chromosomal DNA isolation cDNA library: Contains entire proteinencoding DNA content Messenger RNA used as a starting material Messenger RNA reverse transcribed into cDNA Requires mRNA isolation Polymerase Chain Reaction (PCR) PCR is now a common and often indispensable technique used in medical and biological research labs for a variety of applications. DNA cloning for sequencing www.mun.ca/biology/scarr/PCR_sketch_3.gif DNA-based phylogeny functional analysis of genes diagnosis of hereditary diseases identification of genetic fingerprints (used in forensic sciences and paternity testing) detection and diagnosis of infectious diseases. Taq polymerase Chien A, Edgar DB, Trela JM (1976). "Deoxyribonucleic acid polymerase from the extreme thermophile Thermus aquaticus". J. Bact. 174: 1550–1557 en.wikipedia.org In 1989 Science Magazine named Taq polymerase its first "Molecule of the Year". Kary Mullis received the Nobel Prize in 1993, the only one awarded for research performed at a biotechnology company. http://www.yellowstone.net/geysers/thermalfeatures.htm DNA sequencing The process of determining the exact order of the nucleotides/bases (A, T, C, and G) that make up the DNA of an organism. Gene number, exact locations, and functions Gene regulation DNA sequence organization Chromosomal structure and organization Noncoding DNA types, amount, distribution, information content, and functions Coordination of gene expression, protein synthesis, and post-translational events Interaction of proteins in complex molecular machines Predicted vs experimentally determined gene function Evolutionary conservation among organisms Protein conservation (structure and function) Proteomes (total protein content and function) in organisms Correlation of SNPs (single-base DNA variations among individuals) with health and disease Disease-susceptibility prediction based on gene sequence variation Genes involved in complex traits and multigene diseases Complex systems biology including microbial consortia useful for environmental restoration Developmental genetics, genomics New Sequencing technologies Roche FLX 454 100 million bases per chip $6,000 1 week from DNA extraction to sequence data E. coli genome 5.5 million bases – a 454 run will give an 18x coverage Human genome 3 billion base – 30 runs would give a 1X coverage ABI 3730 (384 well plate) 422 thousand bases per plate 9 plates = $6,000 4 million bases 2 weeks from DNA extraction to sequence data Single Nucleotide Polymorphism (SNP) DNA sequence variation occurring when a single nucleotide - A, T, C, or G - in the genome (or other shared sequence) differs between members of a species (or between paired chromosomes in an individual). Not all SNPs cause a phenotypic change 50K SNP chip – interrogates 50,000 SNP Parentage Heaton MP, Harhay GP, Bennett GL, Stone RT, Grosse WM, Casas E, Keele JW, Smith TP, ChitkoMcKown CG, Laegreid WW. Selection and use of SNP markers for animal identification and paternity analysis in U.S. beef cattle. Mamm Genome. 2002 May;13(5):272-81. Association of disease traits –FPT Clawson ML, Heaton MP, Chitko-McKown CG, Fox JM, Smith TP, Snelling WM, Keele JW, Laegreid WW. Beta-2-microglobulin haplotypes in U.S. beef cattle and association with failure of passive transfer in newborn calves. Mamm Genome. 2004 Mar;15(3):227-36. 0 5 10 15 20 25 30 35 SNPs in E. coli O157:H7 KS368 bovine 0 KS546 bovine 0 TX265 bovine TX723 bovine NE972 bovine NE1370 bovine CO50 bovine TX376 bovine Mass2 human EDL 931 human 0 1271-84 human 0 EDL 933 human 0 CO147 bovine 0 CO713 bovine 0 IDPH31277 human 0 MARC611 bovine 0 NE1124 bovine 0 TW04863 bovine WRRC1 human NE1270 bovine Sakai human TW05356 bovine 3526-87 human 100 Ability to predict those isolates which can cause disease in humans 100 91 89 87 100 0 78 100 97 94 95 B. Finlay SNPs Exon 1 gene Exon 3 Exon 2 Exon 4 SNP DNA trace files individual #1: Aattaatgctt… maternal chromosome paternal chromosome …aatggtatcTattaatgctt… …aatggtatc MALDI-TOF spectra A A/T A/A individual #2: maternal chromosome …aatggtatcAattaatgctt… paternal chromosome …aatggtatcAattaatgctt… A/A individual #3: T/T maternal chromosome …aatggtatcTattaatgctt… paternal chromosome …aatggtatcTattaatgctt… T T/T 5100 5400 5700 Many different technologies for SNP interrogation Real-time PCR Affymetrix Biotrove Illuminia Sequenome DNA Microarrays A high-throughput technology that consists of an arrayed series of thousands of microscopic spots of DNA oligonucleotides of a specific DNA sequence. This can be a short section of a gene or other DNA element that are used as probes to hybridize DNA or cDNA sample (called target) under highstringency conditions. Probe-target hybridization is usually detected and quantified by fluorescence-based detection of fluorophore-labeled targets to determine relative abundance of nucleic acid sequences in the target. Hybridization Hybridization is the process of combining complementary, singlestranded nucleic acids into a single molecule. Perfect...ATGCATGCATGCATGC... :::::::::::::::: ...TACGTACGTACGTACG*.. Imperfect...ATGCATGGGTGCATGC... ::::::: ::::::: ...TACGTACGTACGTACG*.. G T T G G ...ATGCATG TGCATGC... ::::::: ::::::: ...TACGTACGTACGTACG*.. DNA microarrays mRNA expression SNPs Gene content Imperfect- http://www.bio.davidson.edu/Co urses/genomics/chip/chip.html Homework Describe PCR in your own words and pictures Describe a potential application for SNP genotyping in veterinary medicine or beef production Websites http://www.dnai.org/ http://dynamicgene.dnalc.org/structure/structure.html http://www.blackwellpublishing.com/trun/artwork/ Animations/cloningexp/cloningexp.html