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Lecture 3 Introduction to recombinant DNA Technology.

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Tool s Enzymes Vectors Host DNA to be cloned
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Page 1: Lecture 3 Introduction to recombinant DNA Technology.

Tools Enzymes

Vectors

Host

DNA to be cloned

Page 2: Lecture 3 Introduction to recombinant DNA Technology.

Enzymes

Nucleases

Polymerases

Ligases,

Modifying enzymes Topoisomerase,

Page 3: Lecture 3 Introduction to recombinant DNA Technology.

Exonucleases

• Unit Enzyme1ug DNA at 37C in 60 min in 50 ul reaction*

ExonucleaseI ssDNA 3-5ExonucleaseIII dsDNA 3-5ExonucleaseVII ssDNA 3-5 and 5-3

https://www.neb.com/protocols/2012/12/07/optimizing-restriction-endonuclease-reactions

Page 4: Lecture 3 Introduction to recombinant DNA Technology.

How they cutExo III

Page 5: Lecture 3 Introduction to recombinant DNA Technology.

Endonucleases• Dnase I ssDNA, dsDNA

DNA template degradation in transcription reactions Removal of genomic DNA from RNA samples DNase I footprinting Nick Translation

• Mung bean nucleases ssDNA

Removal of single-stranded extensions (3' and 5') to leave ligat able blunt ends

Transcriptional mapping Cleavage of hairpin loops

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A Paternity Test

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Basic Structure of DNA to remember

Page 14: Lecture 3 Introduction to recombinant DNA Technology.

Iso schizomer

Sph I (CGTAC^G) and Bbu I (CGTAC^G)

Neo schizomer

Sma I (CCC/GGG) and Xma I (C/CCGGG)

Iso caudomer

NheI G*CTAG C and AvrII C*CTAG G C GATC*G G GATC*C

Page 15: Lecture 3 Introduction to recombinant DNA Technology.

Neo schizomer

Page 16: Lecture 3 Introduction to recombinant DNA Technology.

Double digestionDouble digestion is a process in which we use two restriction enzymes to cut so that molecules do not snap back on itself or for orientation certainty

Page 17: Lecture 3 Introduction to recombinant DNA Technology.
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RIBONUCLEASESRNase ABovine pancreatic RNase A, Rana pipiens

RNaseHRNase H family can be found in nearly all organisms, from archaea to bacteria and eukaryota.

Rnase IIIDouble stranded RNA degradationRNAi, microRNA

Page 19: Lecture 3 Introduction to recombinant DNA Technology.

Rnase based therapeutic for cancer

Onconase down regulates microRNA expression through targeting microRNA precursors

Cell Research (2012) 22:1199–1202. doi:10.1038/cr.2012.67; published online 24 April 2012

Page 20: Lecture 3 Introduction to recombinant DNA Technology.

Rnase H of HIV and HBV as an example

1- Structural Basis for the Inhibition of RNase H Activity of HIV-1 Reverse Transcriptase by RNase H Active Site-Directed Inhibitors. 2010 Journal of Virology

Page 21: Lecture 3 Introduction to recombinant DNA Technology.

Ligase

Page 22: Lecture 3 Introduction to recombinant DNA Technology.

Ligases and Ligastion

T4 DNA ligase

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What Ligase needs to make an efficient ligation

5 Phosphate is absolute requirement

If removed ligation can not take place

Adjusting the vector insert ratio 1:3 formula?

Contamination in DNA also influence ligationefficiency

Page 24: Lecture 3 Introduction to recombinant DNA Technology.

Need of Alkaline phosphatase (CIAP)

An enzyme that removes phosphatase from it substrate

Why we need to remove the phosphate if it absolutely required

How DNA is ligated after use of CIAP

Page 25: Lecture 3 Introduction to recombinant DNA Technology.

Need of Alkaline phosphatase (CIAP)

An enzyme that removes phosphatase from it substrate

Why we need to remove the phosphate if it absolutely required

How DNA is ligated after use of CIAP

Page 26: Lecture 3 Introduction to recombinant DNA Technology.

E.coli DNA polymerase I

Nick translation

Page 27: Lecture 3 Introduction to recombinant DNA Technology.

Polymerase

Page 28: Lecture 3 Introduction to recombinant DNA Technology.

Klenow fragment Fill in reaction

Page 29: Lecture 3 Introduction to recombinant DNA Technology.

Bacteriophage T4 Polymerase

Active single-stranded 3'->5' exonuclease (ss DNA)(stronger than that of the Klenow fragment)Fill in Trimming back

Page 30: Lecture 3 Introduction to recombinant DNA Technology.

The T7 polymerase

Enzyme has very high proof reading and polymerization

The enzyme chemically or genetically modified

High processivity, and fast polymerase rate

Used in DNA sequencing

Page 31: Lecture 3 Introduction to recombinant DNA Technology.

Taq DNA polymerase Thermus aquaticusPCR optimization,

Pfu DNA polymerase Pyrococcus furiosus

PCR (if DNA has to use in cloning)

Page 32: Lecture 3 Introduction to recombinant DNA Technology.

Terminal De-oxynuclotidyl TransferaseProbe preparation tailing method

Page 33: Lecture 3 Introduction to recombinant DNA Technology.
Page 34: Lecture 3 Introduction to recombinant DNA Technology.

AMV reverse transcriptase

• HIV-1 reverse transcriptase from human immunodeficiency virus

• M-MLV reverse transcriptase from the Moloney murine leukemia virus

• AMV reverse transcriptase from the avian myeloblastosis virus

Page 35: Lecture 3 Introduction to recombinant DNA Technology.

RNA polymerasesS6 RNA Polymerases

T7RNA Polymerases

Page 36: Lecture 3 Introduction to recombinant DNA Technology.

Plasmid Isolation

Solution 1 Solution 2 Solution 350 mM Tris pH 8 200 mM NaOH 3 M Potassium10 mM EDTA 1 % SDS Acetate pH 5.5Re suspends the pellet and maintains the pH and ability to inhibit DNases

Breaks the cell wall to release the content. Denatures the DNA (Breaks H Bonds)

At nutralization The Chromo DNA aggregates being very large while plasmid can not as it is cccDNA

Page 37: Lecture 3 Introduction to recombinant DNA Technology.

Alkaline de naturation and plasmid isolation

Page 38: Lecture 3 Introduction to recombinant DNA Technology.

Uses of different enzymes

Primer removal from PCR mixtures: Exo1 thermoprior to PCR product sequencing (see Reference 2)for one-tube "megaprimer" PCR mutagenesis (see Reference 3)Removal of single-stranded DNA containing a 3'-hydroxyl terminus from nucleic acid mixturesAssay for the presence of single-stranded DNA with a 3'-hydroxyl terminus (see Reference 4)

http://www.thermoscientificbio.com/dna-and-rna-modifying-enzymes/exonuclease-i/


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