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AGR 3303 Exam 3
N/A
67
Biology
Undergraduate 3
03/25/2014

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Term
What is the benefit of cloning genes?
Definition
Gene cloning- isolation of a specific DNA sequence in a way that makes it possible to manipulate it in the lab
- In order to fully understand molecular basis of many processes, traits, or diseases, it is very helpful to have DNA sequence info of key genes
Term
Targeted cloning approach
Definition
solation of specific genes that we already know exist based on mapping studies or presence of mutants
Term
Random cloning approach
Definition
Isolation of many genes that may have something to do with a process of interest, without a prior knowledge of existence and/or function of genes; generally lies on induction of mutations followed by a screen for altered phenotypes
Term
recombinant DNA
Definition
A novel DNA sequence formed by the combination of two nonhomologous DNA molecules
Term
what is a vector
Definition
a carrier of recombinant DNA, and is normally a plasmid or viral DNA origin
Term
How do you create a vector?
Definition
use same restriction enzyme to cut plasmid DNA that was used to develop DNA fragments that are inserted into the plasmid
Term
PCR
Definition
- PCR: in vitro amplification of DNA
- Developed by Dr. Kari Mullis in 1983 (got Nobel prize in chemistry)
- Relies of DNA polymerases from thermophilic archaebacteria (can survive a very hot temp)
- Requires primers- oligonucleotides of 18-25 nucleotides long
Term
What are the 3 steps of PCR?
Definition
o 1. Denaturation- melting two DNA strands by heating to 94 C
o 2. Primer annealing- cool reaction to temp between 50 and 70 C
 Primers have known sequence and delineate the region that will be amplified
 Primers are designed by researcher and synthesized by companies
o 3. Primer extension- at 72 C using heat-stable polymerase
o Happens in machine called thermal cycler
o Amplification is exponential
Term
What is the original Sanger sequencing?
Definition
 sequencing reactions were carried out in four separate tubes
 Incorporation of ddNTP blocks further synthesis
 Each reaction loaded in a separate lane; products separated on a gel; sort fragments at bottom
 Gel is dried, exposed to X-ray film, bands read from bottom to top
Term
What is the modern Sanger sequencing?
Definition
 Each ddNTP has its own fluorescent label
 All four ddNTPs are included in sequencing reaction
 Products separated on polyacrylamide gel, but more commonly using a thin capillary tube
 A laser at bottom of gel or tube scan which label passes
Term
Map-based cloning/sequencing
Definition
o Relies on fragmentation of chromosomes into fragments of 150 kb in length that are cloned in bacterial artificial chromosomes
o A shortest tiling path is constructed from these BACs using molecular markers
o BACs then fragmented and pieces are cloned, sequenced, and aligned to BAC
o Used in Human Genome Project
Term
Whole-genome shotgun cloning/sequencing
Definition
o Entire genome sheared in small, overlapping pieces 3-5 kb in length, which are cloned into plasmids and sequenced
o Overlapping sequences are aligned with use of computer programs and assembled to represent the entire genome
o Privately funded Celera Genomics used this and it was faster
Term
Natural process of agrobacterium
Definition
bacteria injects plasmid into plant cell DNA
Term
Engineered process of agrobacterium
Definition
 Foreign DNA + shuttle vector = plasmid
 ‘Binary system’ within bacteria is bacterial chromosome, shuttle vector plasmid, and TI plasmid
 Shuttle vector plasmid is injected and incorporated into plant DNA
Term
What is agrobacterium?
Definition
o Agrobacterium is soil-borne pathogenic bacterium that induces crown gall in susceptible plants
 Involves transfer of DNA from tumor inducing (TI) plasmid of bacteria to plant
 Plant tumor makes compound bacterium needs (opines, nopalines)
 TI-genes can be removed and replaced by gene of interest
 TI DNA can be moved into second plasmid
Term
Gel electrophoresis:
-amount of DNA used
-what is gel made of
-what is gel submersed in
-direction of DNA
Definition
o Amount of DNA is between 10 nanogram and 20 microgram
o Gel made of agarose (polysaccharide from seaweed) that gels after boiling
o Gel submersed in low-salt buffer to allow electricity to go through, maintain pH
o DNA is neg charged from phosphate groups, so DNA migrates to positive end
o Gel can be used to visualize DNA, estimate size based on a size marker of known fragments; DNA can be isolated from the gel if desired
Term
DNA library
Definition
o Cloned DNA segment is small and may represent only single gene or portion of gene
o Many clones needed to cover organism’s genome
o Set of DNA clones is called a cloned library
Term
cDNA library
Definition
o DNA strand synthesized from mature mRNA
o Reverse transcriptase is enzyme responsible for synthesizing
o Contains uninterrupted sequence of eukaryotic gene
 No introns
 Can still function to express desired gene product
Term
Aneuploids
Definition
organisms that do not carry a correct set of their basic chromosome number
o Organisms gains or loses one or more chromosomes, but not complete set
Term
Monosomy
Definition
the loss of a single chromosome
Term
Trisomy
Definition
the gain of a single chromosome (3 homologous chromosomes)
Term
polyploidy
Definition
an individual having more than 2 sets of the basic chromosome number
Term
Basic chromosome number
Definition
(x)
o Lowest chromosome number in polyploid series
o Each chromosome represented only once
o Haploid from diploid species contains basic chromosome number
Term
What is autopolyploid
Definition
multiple sets of chromosomes are identical
Term
formation of autopolyploid
Definition
• 1. Failure of chromosomes to segregate during meiotic divisions can produce diploid gamete
o Fertilization by a haploid gamete  triploid zygote
• 2. Crossing a diploid with a tetraploid
o Diploid gamete: x chromosmes
o Tetraploid gamete: + 2x chromosomes
o Triploid zygote: 3x chromosomes
Term
why are triploids sterile and why are they valuable?
Definition
- Odd number of chromosomes fail to divide evenly and create unbalanced gametes
Term
How do restriction enzymes work?
Definition
- They locate the restriction site on the gene but then they cut it as a sticky end of blunt end
Term
X-Gal and ampicilin
Definition
X-Gal converted by beta-galactosidase into Gal and X (X by itself is blue)
 Bacteria without plasmid die- no colony
 Bacteria with empty plasmids are blue because they have functional lacZ
 Bacteria with recombinant DNA are white because lacZ has been interrupted
Term
Gene gun
Definition
o DNA can be shot into cells- known as biolistics or particle bombardment
o DNA precipitated onto small gold or tungsten particles
o Gene of interest under control of a suitable promoter
o Selectable marker (antibiotic/herbicide resistant gene) to identify cells that stably express the transgene
o Particles shot into cell using pressure burst
o Percentage of cells that take up DNA > % that express transgene > % that stably express transgene
o Hard to control copy number- some transformed cells have many copies, others few
o Agrobacterium transformation results in low number of transgenes and more predictable results
o Also important from regulatory perspective
Term
Allopolyploids
Definition
multiple sets of chromosomes are different
Term
Deletions
Definition
loss of chromosomal regions due to breaks
Term
what are the 2 types of deletions
Definition
o Terminal
 Deletion occurs near end of chromosome
o Intercalary
 Deletion occurs within interior of chromosome
Term
what are deletions dependent upon
Definition
- Loss depends on centromere
o Retained if broken portion contains centromere
o Segment without centromere is lost
Term
synapsis
Definition
normal homolog must develop a bundle (compensation loop) to pair with chromosome that has deletion
Term
what are consequences of deletions
Definition
o Occurrence in non coding are silent
o Single gene affects or large deletions that KO several closely linked genes are often lethal
Term
duplications (insertions)
Definition
- Increased copies of specific chromosome region (a region is present twice)
Term
what are the causes of insertions
Definition
Unequal crossing over between synapsed chromosomes during meiosis
 Duplication and deletion are created
o 2. Replication error prior to meiosis
Term
what are consequences of insertions
Definition
- Most duplications have no obvious phenotypic consequences and can only be detected by cytological or molecular methods
Term
inversions
Definition
- Chromosome segment turned around 180 degrees within a chromosome (ABCDEF  ABEDCF)
- Not a loss of genetic info
- Rearrangement of liner gene sequence
o Orientation of genes in segment is reversed
- Requires two break and subsequent inversion of inverted segment
Term
what are the 2 types of inversions
Definition
o Paracentric
 Inversion with ONE ARM of a chromosome
o Pericentric
 Centromere is part of inverted segment. BOTH arms involved
Term
translocations
Definition
- Movement of a chromosomal segment to a new location in the genome
Term
reciprocal translocation
Definition
o Exchange of chromosomal regions between two non-homologous chromosomes
Term
what is the result of a translocation
Definition
- Typically do not result in a loss of genetic material so they often do not cause detectable changes
Term
robertsonian translocation
Definition
o Non reciprocal translocation in which two acrocentric nonhomologous chromosomes fuse to form a single chromosome
Term
locus
Definition
position that a gene occupies in a chromosome (gene location)
Term
allele
Definition
alternative forms of a gene; found at same place on chromosome
Term
phenotype
Definition
appearance of an organism
Term
genotype
Definition
genetic constitution of an organism
Term
monohybrid
Definition
crossing parental varieties that differ in only one trait of interest
Term
dihybrid
Definition
parents differ for two traits of interest
Term
trihybird
Definition
parents differ for three traits for interest
Term
heterozygous
Definition
inherited different alleles at one or more loci; having different alleles of a gene between homologous chromosomes
Term
homozygous
Definition
inherited identical alleles at one or more loci; having the same allele of a gene in homologous chromosomes
Term
homologous chromosomes
Definition
a set of one maternal chromosome and one paternal chromosome that pair up with each other inside a cell during meiosis
Term
gametes
Definition
sex cells (value = n)
Term
somatic cells
Definition
all other cells besides sex (value = 2n)
Term
true breeding
Definition
sometimes also called a pure-bred, is an organism that always passes down a certain phenotypic trait to its offspring
Term
qualitative trait
Definition
controlled by single gene, not altered by enviro
Term
testcross
Definition
cross between dominant phenotype and a recessive phenotype; used to determine the genotype of the dominant plant
Term
complete dominance
Definition
the phenotypic effect of one allele completely masks the other in heterozygous combination; that is, the phenotype produced by the two alleles in heterozygous combination is identical to that produced by one of the two homozygous genotypes
Term
apomixis
Definition
asexual reproduction in plants, in particular agamospermy
Term
Mendel's Law of Segregation
Definition
o During gamete formation, paired alleles of a gene segregate randomly so that each gamete receives one allele or another with equal probabilities
Term
particulate inheritance
Definition
o Traits are determined by genes
o Gene exists in pairs of alleles
Term
dominance/recessiveness
Definition
o Results in uniform F1 progeny controlled by expression of the dominant allele
Term
Mendel's Law of Independent Assortment
Definition
o During gamete formation, segregation of alleles at one locus in INDEPENDENT of the segregation of alleles at another locus
Term
How is recombinant DNA made using restriction enzymes
Definition
- Restriction enzymes are used to produce recombinant DNA because they are sequence specific and they are able to recognize and be bound to specific DNA sequences. When mixed together, the molecules can join together through the base pairing on their sticky ends and the bond is made permanent by a DNA ligase which forms covalent bonds on the backbone of each DNA strand
Term
What are the 3 properties of a vector?
Definition
o 1. Vector can be introduced into host cell
o 2. Vector contains replication origin and can replicate inside host cell
o 3. Cells containing vector can usually be selected by straightforward assay by allowing growth of host cell on selective media
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