Lecture 13 Flashcards

1
Q

What is the purpose of DNA transformation?

A

-changing the phenotype

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2
Q

What are plasmids?

A

-plasmids occur naturally in bacterial cells -circles of DNA -self replicating -extra to the bacterial DNA -often when bacteria survive the presence of antibiotics= plasmids allow them to survive

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3
Q

Describe:

A

first obtained from bacteria then engineered to have three principal components - origin of replication, gene for some sort of antibiotic resistence inserted(here ampR codes for enzyme beta lactamase that brakes down ampicilin), multiple cloning site- recognition sequences for lot of restriction enzymes so you can open up the plasmids, these sequences can be all over the plasmid as well

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4
Q

How are plasmids named eg: pBR322

A

p-plasmid BR- names of researchers 322- probably the number of attempt

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5
Q

How do you open a plasmid and insert sequence you want?

A
  • with a plasmid- use restriction enzyme, open it up
  • put in DNA cut with the same enzyme - then they will both have the same unattached bases so they will hybridise
  • used extensively eg humulin- engineered human insulin
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6
Q

How are plasmids used with growth deficiencies?

A

if child not growing enough- give the growth hormone= growth (usually when child grows less than 5cm a year between the ages 3-12)

-2 types of growth hormone- put the hromone coding sequenc einto the plasmid then back to the bacteria the gene expressed and produce of growth hormone

-somatonorm- supplement that some athletes use to bulk up
(Turner’s syndrome women given this to grow)

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7
Q

How are Haemophiliacs A helped with plasmids?

A
  • can make factor VIII
  • Factor VIII gene into plasmid, into bacteria and produce Factor VII for the treatment of Haemophilia A
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8
Q

How can we make bacteria resistant to Ampicilin?

A

most wild bacteria- not ampicillin resistant
can add the gene (make the peptidoglycan walls permeable to the plasmid) some will take the plasmid

  • then test on agar with ampicilin: the ones with the plasmid will grow the rest won’t- recognise which using the ampicillin= transformed bacteria
  • not all bacteria will take up the plasmid= only small colonies
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9
Q

Describe:

A

the plasmid in prac. can take the sensitive bacteria and expose them to the plasmid, some will take it, we recognise it beacuse they will glow in UV light!

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10
Q

Describe:

A

lac Z gene- if grown on particular agar= blue if human gene put in= white colonies
-way of determining if the plasmid is taken up

-the gene does something we want but this way we know if it’s taken up or not and which ones will produce the wanted substance

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11
Q

Where do we see interference RNA and what is it?

A

-in XIST inactivation

interference RNA- when RNA interferes with gene expression

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12
Q

What is messenger RNA?

A

mRNA

  • carrying the DNA molecule message into the cytoplasm for use
  • formed during transcription from a DNA template
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13
Q

What is ribosomal RNA?

A
  • rRNA and proteins combine to make ribosomes
  • structural RNA-ribosomes= important for gene expression

pic=almost looks double stranded because of how it bend back on itself

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14
Q

What is transfer RNA?

A

tRNA

  • Carries amino acids to the ribosome in translation
  • anticodon matches with codon of mRNA
  • specific amino acid for each anticodon attached to 3’ end

-shuttles the amino acid into position during translation
parts of this RNA double stranded

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15
Q

What is micro RNA?

A

smaller, only 22 nucleotides in length
there may be a gene sequence not coding for a polypeptide only for RNA- get the micro RNA- can be complementary to mRNA that was going to produce a polypeptide and can bind to it and stop this sequence from working- can be permanent but also temporary eg. environmental factors

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16
Q

What is the central dogma of genetics?

A
  • In bacteria the chromosome in cytosol so transcription and translation happen there almost simultaneously, in sequence
  • in eukaryote more complicated, added step- processing, RNA must be modified before it is called mRNA- this happens in the nucleus,first produce primary RNA transcript then modification to mature mRNA
17
Q

Describe the statistics of the human genome:

A
18
Q

Describe transcription:

A

A gene consists of the coding sequence and regulatory sequences a gene is a sequence of DNA from 75 bp - 2 300 000bp (2300kb)

-Only one strand of the DNA double helix in a given gene codes for the polypeptide = template strand (can be either one)

5’-3’ direction of transcription
so the it only adds bases to the 3’end