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Biotechnology 1. Making microbes work for you! 2. Base pairing between nucleic acids is really useful What if we wanted a lot of human insulin? Fig. 20-2a Bacterium 1 Gene inserted into Cell containing gene of interest plasmid Bacterial chromosome Plasmid Recombinant DNA (plasmid) Gene of interest 2 2 Plasmid put into bacterial cell Recombinant bacterium DNA of chromosome pET11c: an example of a plasmid Restriction enzymes: -Enzymes that break the sugar-phosphate backbone of DNA (“restrict” the DNA) at specific sequences -Many leave short, single-stranded “sticky ends” after they cut DNA Table of restriction enzymes Fig. 20-3-1 Restriction site DNA 1 5 3 3 5 Restriction enzyme cuts sugar-phosphate backbones. Sticky end Fig. 20-3-2 Restriction site DNA 1 5 3 3 5 Restriction enzyme cuts sugar-phosphate backbones. Sticky end 2 DNA fragment added from another molecule cut by same enzyme. Base pairing occurs. One possible combination Fig. 20-3-3 Restriction site DNA 1 5 3 3 5 Restriction enzyme cuts sugar-phosphate backbones. Sticky end 2 DNA fragment added from another molecule cut by same enzyme. Base pairing occurs. One possible combination 3 DNA ligase seals strands. Recombinant DNA molecule Fig. 20-4-1 Hummingbird cell TECHNIQUE Bacterial cell Restriction site ampR gene Bacterial plasmid Sticky ends Gene of interest Hummingbird DNA fragments Fig. 20-4-2 Hummingbird cell TECHNIQUE Bacterial cell Restriction site ampR gene Sticky ends Bacterial plasmid Gene of interest Hummingbird DNA fragments Nonrecombinant plasmid Recombinant plasmids Fig. 20-4-3 Hummingbird cell TECHNIQUE Bacterial cell Restriction site ampR gene Sticky ends Bacterial plasmid Gene of interest Hummingbird DNA fragments Nonrecombinant plasmid Recombinant plasmids Bacteria carrying plasmids Fig. 20-4-4 Hummingbird cell TECHNIQUE Bacterial cell Restriction site ampR gene Sticky ends Bacterial plasmid Gene of interest Hummingbird DNA fragments Nonrecombinant plasmid Recombinant plasmids Bacteria carrying plasmids RESULTS One of many bacterial clones Fig. 20-4-4 Hummingbird cell TECHNIQUE Bacterial cell Restriction site ampR gene Sticky ends Bacterial plasmid Gene of interest Hummingbird DNA fragments Nonrecombinant plasmid Recombinant plasmids Bacteria carrying plasmids RESULTS How do we know which plasmid has our gene of interest (i.e. insulin)? One of many bacterial clones Fig. 20-7 Base pairing (“hybridization”) between nucleic acids is very powerful TECHNIQUE Radioactively labeled probe molecules Multiwell plates holding library clones Probe DNA Gene of interest Single-stranded DNA from cell Film • Nylon membrane Nylon Location of membrane DNA with the complementary sequence pET11c: an example of a plasmid Will E. coli be able to express human insulin? Fig. 20-6-5 DNA in nucleus mRNAs in cytoplasm mRNA Reverse transcriptase allows RNA to be copied (“reverse transcribed”) into cDNA Reverse transcriptase Poly-A tail DNA Primer strand Degraded mRNA DNA polymerase cDNA What if we wanted to introduce a functional insulin gene into a patient? Fig. 20-22 Cloned gene Not yet feasible 1 Insert RNA version of normal allele into retrovirus. Viral RNA 2 Retrovirus capsid Let retrovirus infect bone marrow cells that have been removed from the patient and cultured. 3 Viral DNA carrying the normal allele inserts into chromosome. Bone marrow cell from patient 4 Inject engineered cells into patient. Bone marrow Fig. 20-11 TECHNIQUE DNA + restriction enzyme Restriction fragments I II III Heavy weight Nitrocellulose membrane (blot) Gel Sponge I Normal -globin allele II Sickle-cell allele III Heterozygote 1 Preparation of restriction fragments Paper towels Alkaline solution 2 Gel electrophoresis 3 DNA transfer (blotting) Radioactively labeled probe for -globin gene I II III Probe base-pairs with fragments Fragment from sickle-cell -globin allele Nitrocellulose blot 4 Hybridization with radioactive probe Fragment from normal -globin allele I II III Film over blot 5 Probe detection Fig. 20-13 TECHNIQUE 1 cDNA synthesis mRNAs cDNAs 2 PCR amplification Primers -globin gene 3 Gel electrophoresis RESULTS Embryonic stages 1 2 3 4 5 6 Fig. 20-14 50 µm Fig. 20-15 TECHNIQUE 1 Isolate mRNA. 2 Make cDNA by reverse transcription, using fluorescently labeled nucleotides. 3 Apply the cDNA mixture to a microarray, a different gene in each spot. The cDNA hybridizes with any complementary DNA on the microarray. Tissue sample mRNA molecules Labeled cDNA molecules (single strands) DNA fragments representing specific genes DNA microarray 4 Rinse off excess cDNA; scan microarray for fluorescence. Each fluorescent spot represents a gene expressed in the tissue sample. DNA microarray with 2,400 human genes