Cloning and Sequencing
Cloning and Sequencing
Cloning and Sequencing
Sequencing
Project overview
Background
Project will have you cloning the
gene that codes for the enzyme
glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate
dehydrogenase (GAPDH)
GAPDH is a housekeeping gene
necessary for survival
GAPDH is an enzyme that is crucial
for glycolysis to occur
Glycolysis
GAPDH
can be easily isolated in cells
Is made up of four subunits that are either
identical (homotetramer) or in pairs of
slightly different proteins (heterodimer)
Has two domains: amino terminal region
binds to NAD+ while the carboxy terminal
region has the dehydrogenase activity
Does two things:
Removes H+ from GAP and transfers
it to NAD+
Adds second Phosphate to GAP
GAPDH genes
Found in the cytosol (glycolysis) and
in the chloroplast as part of
photosynthesis
Isozymes coded for on nuclear DNA
GAPC denotes the gene that codes
for cytosolic GAPDH and is the gene
that we will study.
The GAPC protein is a heterodimer.
Gene Cloning
Big picture for this unit
Isolate GAPC gene from plants
Amplify the GAPC gene by nested PCR
Assess the results of the PCR
Purify the PCR product containing GAPC
Ligate (insert) GAPC gene into plasmid
vector
Transform bacteria with new plasmid
Isolate plasmid from bacteria
Confirm plasmid by restriction digests
Prepare plasmid DNA to be sequenced by
outside facility
Analyze sequence of your GAPC gene
using bioinformatics
Nucleic Acid Extraction
Task is to separate DNA from rest of the
cellular components, including membranes,
proteins, and enzymes
Must also remain in tact after extraction
Plant cells also have a cell wall to disrupt
Nucleases can digest DNA
Acidic contents of organelles can damage
DNA
Some plants have polyphenols that bind to
DNA rendering it useless for experiments
Basic Steps of DNA
Extraction
Harvest cells from fresh, young plants
Round 0 = 1 copy
Round 35 = billions of
copies
PCR players
DNA template – targeted piece of DNA
Primers – small segments of DNA that
bind complementary upstream and
downstream of the target on the
template
Taq DNA polymerase – isolated from the
Thermus aquaticus bacteria found in
hotsprings of Yellowstone Park
DNA nucleotides in the form of
deoxynucleoside triphosphates (dNTPs)
Reaction Buffer – maintains pH for
General PCR Process
Denaturation – split apart the two DNA
strands by heating them to 95oC for 1
min
Annealing – primers bind to target
sequence by cooling reaction to 40-60oC
for 1 min
Extension – Taq Polymerase extends the
primers and copies each DNA template
strand by heating to 72oC for 1 min
Primers
Required for both sides of the target
sequence (forward & reverse primer)
Length of primer is generally 18-30
nucleotides
G/C content and intra-complementarity are a
concern when designing primers
Actually not a single primer for each but a
mixture of primers (oligoprimers) if the
sequence of the target is not known
If amino acid sequence of gene product is
used then degenerate primers must be used
Initial forward primer is
GABTATGTTGTTGARTCTTCWGG
B=G/T/C R=G/A (purines) W =A/T
Nested PCR
Initial PCR primers are degenerate
and based on a consensus sequence
The chances that the initial primers
will bind to sequences other than the
target are high
A second set of primers designed to
be more specific to GAPC is used
They are nested within the initial
primers and are not degenerate thus
much more specific to the GAPC gene
Nested PCR
Set-up
Our experiment
Tube 1: negative control (no DNA)
Tube 2: Arabidopsis gDNA
Tube 3: Positive control pGAP plasmid
Tube 4: Your plant DNA
PCR Plan 1st round 2nd
round (nested)
Initial Denaturation 95oC for 5 minutes 95oC for 5
minutes
Then 40 Cycles of:
Denaturation 95oC for 1 minute 95oC for 1
minute
Annealing 52oC for 1 minute 46oC for 1
minute
Extention 72oC for 2 minutes 72oC for 2
Gel Electrophoresis
PCR purification
Small impurities can have a negative
effect on the ligation of the PCR
product to vector DNA
Impurities include unincorporated
dNTPs, polymerases, primers and
small primer-dimers.
A PCR Kleen spin column will
remove the impurities in less than 4
min.
Gene Cloning
Cloning is the production of exact
copies of a piece of DNA.
It requires ligating (splicing) the
PCR product into a cloning vector –
often a plasmid DNA
The recombinant DNA of the ligation
product can now be put into a cell to
propagate (replicated)
Plasmids are good
vectors:
small (2,000 – 10,000 bp)
circular, self-replicating
high copy number
multiple cloning sites (MCS)
selectable markers (Amp-resistance)
screening (reporter genes, positive
select)
control mechanisms (lac operon)
can handle the size of the insert
pJet1.3 blunted vector
Designed for blunt-end cloning
High copy number
Contains Amp-resistant gene
Contains eco47IR gene which allows
for positive selection
It is 2,974 bp long
Inserts
Sticky ends have single strands of
nucleotides on ends and are good for
directional inserting
Blunt ends have no single
strands and thus are easier
to insert but are non
directional.
Ligation
T4 DNA Ligase catalyzes formation of
phosphodiesterase bond between 3’
hydroxy on one piece and the 5’
phosphate on another piece.
Requires ATP and Mg+2
Insert to vector DNA ratio should be
1:1
Proofing reading DNA polymerase
removes dangling 3’A of PCR product
Products of Ligation
Self-ligation of vector
Ligation of vector to primer-dimers
Ligation of multiple inserts
Self-ligation of inserts
Ligation of one insert into vector
Transformation
Once PCR product (insert) has been
ligated into a plasmid, the plasmid
be introduced into a living bacterial
cell to replicate.
Two methods of transformation:
Electroporation
Heat Shock
Fragment 1 Fragment 2
Enzyme Examples
EcoRI G-A-A-T-T-C
C-T-T-A-A-G
HindIII A-A-G-C-T-T
T-T-C-G-A-A
BamHI G-G-A-T-C-C
C-C-T-A-G-G
Bgl II A-G-A-T-C-T
T-C-T-A-G-A
Restriction Digest
Restriction Buffer provides optimal
conditions:
NaCl provides correct ionic strength
Tris-HCl provides proper pH