DNA structure, Organization, Purification, Quantification
Karyotype preparation
* cultured cells are arrested at metaphase because this is when the cells are most condensed and easiest to ID. The arrested cells are broken open * metaphase chromosomes are fixed and stained * chromosomes are digitally imaged through microscope * digital images of chromosomes are arranged (by size) to form a karyotype diagram
Modifications of disposables for RNA extraction
- Certified RNase free OR - Rinsed in 0.1% diethyl pyrocarbonate (DEPC)
What are the best fixatives for DNA extraction by PCR?
- acetone - 10% buffered neutral formalin - FFPE (formalin fixed, paraffin embedded)
Liquid phase extraction procedure
- add phenol/chloroform to DNA dissolved in water - mix thoroughly to form an emulsion - separate phases by centrifugation - DNA remains in upper (less dense) aqueous phase - precipitated proteins rest on top of the lower phenol/chloroform layer - upper layer is removed and DNA precipitated
Modifications of reagents for RNA extraction
- certified RNase free OR - add 0.05-0.1% DEPC (except in Tris-based solutions which inactivate DEPC) - Trizol (guanidinium, phenol, chloroform)
Solid phase DNA extraction procedure
- lyse cells in high salt buffer - add silica beads to lysate, or pass lysate through a column containing a silica filter - wash impurities off with a high salt buffer (to keep DNA bound to silica) - Wash with alcohol to remove salts and other impurities - elute DNA off silica with low ionic strength aqueous solution DNA is generally sufficiently pure so that further cleaning (precip) is not needed.
total RNA isolation can be obtained by:
- silica based binding technique - precipitation procedure with TRIzol reagent (phenol and guanidine isothiocyanate reagent)
NA isolation alternatives
- sonication - physical disruption with beads (bead beating)
DNA isolation common steps (3)
1. cell lysis - disrupt membranes - denature/degrade proteins 2. extraction - liquid or solid phase - pulls out impurities 3. precipitation - further purifies the DNA
What are the main ways to lyse a cell?
1. detergents 2. chaotropic salts 3. proteases
what are the 2 methods of nucleic acid isolation?
1. direct interference - enzyme inhibitors 2. Indirect interference - impurities bind the DNA and effectively make it unavilable for enzymatic reaction
What are the 2 types of functional DNA sequences?
1. families of coding genes (and related pseudogenes) 2. noncoding functional sequences (telomeres- no function of making proteins but protects as its function)
What are the types of non-functional repetitive DNA?
1. repeats in centromeric heterochromatin (basically just centromeres) 2. variable number tandem repeats (used in forensics) 3. transposed sequences (transposons or retrotransposons)
DNA isolation: MagnaPure
1. sample 2. add lysis buffer and proteinase k 3. NA binding to magnetic particles (DNA or RNA is removed by DNase/RNase) 4. Magnetic separation 5. removal of cellular debris by washing step 6. magnetic separation of the NA bead complex 7. NA elution at high temps during removal of beads
Eukaryotic DNA can be broken down into 3 types
1. single-copy functional genes (only 1 copy) 2. repetitive DNA 3. spacer DNA (not either above)
an OD of 1 corresponds to ___________ for oligonucleotides
20 µL/mL
what ratio is the second measure of purity?
260/230
What wavelength is used to determine purity of NA for spectrophotometry? why?
280nm - peptide bonds and some organic solvents absorb strongly at this wavelength
an OD of 1 corresponds to ________ ssDNA
37 µg/mL
an OD of 1 corresponds to _____ RNA
40 µg/mL
DNA polymerase adds nucleotides in what direction?
5' to 3'
an OD of 1 corresponds to _________ dsDNA
50 µg/mL
What should the 260/230 ratio be for pure DNA?
>1.6
What should the 260/230 ratio be for pure RNA?
>1.8
Which bases are pyrimidines?
Cytosine and Thymine
DNA is __________ and ______________
DNA is complementary and anti-parallel
What is the structural difference between DNA and RNA?
DNA is deoxy- meaning there is no hydroxyl (OH) group at the 2nd carbon in the nucleotide. RNA has a hydroxyl group located at the second carbon
Electrophoresis
DNA is negatively charged, so when placed in an electrical field, the DNA will migrate toward the positive pole (anode) - the agarose gel is used to slow the movement of DNA and separate it by size.
Heterochromatin
DNA that is densely packed around histones. The genes in heterochromatin are generally inaccessible to enzymes and are turned off. - inactive and not highly transcribed
nucleosome structure
DNA wrapped around 8 histones, sealed with another histone
Explain how DNA is condensed
DNA wraps around histone proteins to form nucleosomes. The nucleosomes will coil and stack to form fibers (known as chromatin). Chromatin will loop and fold (with the help of other proteins) to create chromosomes
What is the purpose of a DNA ladder?
Makes it easy to determine the sizes of unknown DNAs.
sample preparation for gel electrophoresis
Mix the samples of DNA with DNA sample loading buffer (w/ tracking dye to allow samples to be seen and have density).
Liquid phase extraction is done by what chemicals?
Oldest method and still being used Phenol/chloroform - denatures and extracts proteins - non-miscible with water
mRNA purification is best accomplished via binding to ____________ on a solid medium or column
Oligo dT fixed
Heterozygous
Pair of alleles for a trait are not genetically identical
Running the gel
Place the cover on the electrophoresis chamber, connecting the electrical leads. Connect the electrical leads to the power supply (making sure they are attached correctly). When turned on, bubbles should form on the electrodes in the electrophoresis chamber.
Why is DNA consdensed?
Protection
Which bases have two rings?
Purines: - Adenine and Guanine
How does fluorometry work
Quantitates NA by mixing DNA with a dye and then measuring fluorescence in a fluorometer
Agilent bioanalyzer
Quantitation and Quality for RNA Gel electrophoresis in a nanofluitic chamber - separates based on size - laster at bottom that measures fluorescence
Pyrophosphate
Released during the addition of deoxyribonucleotides to the nascent DNA chain
What is the goal of nucleic acid isolation?
Remove inhibitors and impurities that interfere with testing
automated silica extraction
Silica-coated magnetic beads - proprietary beads - increased binding kinetics/efficiency - enhanced removal of contaminants - commercially available
DNA migrates towards the _________ a. anode b. cathode
a. anode (red)
Specimens for NA extraction
any sample containing nucleic acid - whole blood - buffy coat - bone marrow - solid tissue - lavage fluids - bacteria, viruses, fungi - organelles, mitochondria
the movement of DNA in gel electrophoresis is __________ a. linear b. exponential
b. exponential
which statement is true? a. spectrophotometry can accurately determine concentration, purity, and quality of NA b. spectrophotometry can accurately determine concentration, purity, but not quality of NA c. spectrophotometry cannot accurately determine concentration, but can determine purity and quality of NA
b. spectrophotometry can accurately determine concentration, purity, but not quality of NA
Concentration calculation
concentration= (OD) (constant)(dilution factor)
What does a high 160/180 ratio indicate?
contamination by RNA - use RNases and then do a precip step
What does a low 160/180 ratio indicate?
contamination by protein or solvent - re-do phenol and chloroform step to remove proteins
What method is used to determine if NA is intact?
electrophoresis - degraded NA will absorb as strongly at 260nm as non-degraded sample
Staining the gel
ethidium bromide binds to DNA (sits between the base pairs) and fluoresces under UV light, allowing the visualization of DNA on a gel * can be added to the gel and/or running buffer before the gel is run or the gel can be stained after it has run.
What is included in the loading buffer?
glycerol - for weight so sample will sink into well bromophenol blue - to see the sample (doesnt selectively bind NA) - used to monitor extent of electrophoresis
a sugar and base form _______________, when phosphorylated it is made into ______________
nucleoside, nucleotide
What is the building blocks of nucleic acid?
nucleotides
what is absorbed strongly at 230nm?
peptide bonds, carbohydrates, phenol, thiocyanates, and other organics
what causes a low 260/230 ratio?
protein or solvent (ethanol or phenol)
160/180 ratio for pure DNA and pure RNA
pure DNA: 1.6-2.0 pure RNA: 1.8-2.2
the ratio of 260/280 absorbance is a measure of ________-
purity
What does the nanodrop reading evaluate?
purity and quantity
What does fluorometry evaluate?
quantitation
________ are the markers for RNA quality in a prep
rRNA
What 2 chemicals are added for precipitation?
salt - cations bind to the phosphate groups of DNA molecules to neutralize the negative charge - DNA molecules can clump instead of repelling each other when alcohol is added alcohol - DNA is insoluble in alcohol - adding alcohol makes the DNA clump together and precipitate out of a solution - precipitated DNA appears as fluffy, stringy, web-like threads thats can be pelleted or "spooled"
Spectrophotometry: Nanodrop
sample size: 1-2 µL quantitation: 2ng/µL - >3 ng/ul no cuvettes- sample is applied directly onto optical head
Solid phase DNA extraction uses?
silica beads
What does the speed of migration for gel electrophoresis depend on?
strength of the electrical field, buffer, density of agarose gel size of DNA - small DNA moves faster than large DNA molecules
If the 160/180 ratio is contaminated, what do you have to do for the 160 reading?
the 160 reading cannot be used and must be decontaminated and re-done
loading the gel
the loaded pipette tip is placed over a well and the DNA/loading buffer mixture is gently expelled. The sample should sink inot the well but be careful not to puncture the gel with the pipette tip.
how many hydrogen bonds are between C and G?
three
How many hydrogen bonds are between A and T?
two
Two different dyes for fluormetry
Hoechst 33258 - quantitate to 10 ng/mL Picogreen - quantitate to 25 pg/mL, and less sensitive to the presence of contaminants
Modifications of bench/equipment for RNA extraction
Ideally, a separate lab area or separate lab equipment designed RNase free - clean with RNase inhibitors
Quality by Electrophoresis
High quality NA appears as a tight band during electrophoresis * note on the RNA electrophoresis, you cannot differentiate mRNA*
modifications of reactions for RNA extraction
Add Rnasin (promega)
Which bases are purines?
Adenine and Guanine
What are the 4 bases of DNA?
Adenine, Thymine, Guanine, Cytosine
Gel preparation
After the agarose has cooled, it will polymerize and form a flexible gel. The combs and tape should be removed. Electrophoresis buffer is added to cover the gel to a depth of about 1 mm. Each well needs to b filled with buffer.
How do you prep agarose?
Agarose is insoluble at room temperature, so the solution is boiled until it is clear. After boiling, it must be cooled and then it can be poured into the casting tray (try to avoid air bubbles)
Dominant
An allele that affects/masks the other allele with which it is paired... results in observed phenotype
Recessive
An allele whose effect is masked by the other allele with which it is paired
why do we measure concentration at 260nm for NA?
Bases absorb strongly at this wavelength
Quantitation by qPCR
Compare Ct for specimen to standard curve for human genomic DNA of known concentration amplify standard "housekeeping genes: such as - 18s - beta actin - glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase
When lysing the cell, what degrates and denatures proteins?
Degradation (chopping) - proteases destroy nuclear proteins that bind to DNA and cytoplasmic enzymes that breakdown and destroy DNA - Proteinase K is the most commonly used protease because it is not denatured by SDS or Chaotropic salts Denaturation (unfolding) - done by detergents and chaotropic salts - makes them more susceptible to proteases
When lysing the cell, what disrupts the cell membrane?
Detergents - SDS* - CTAB Chaotropic Salts - urea - guanidinium hydrochloride*
What are the 2 types of families when it comes to coding genes?
Dispersed gene families Tandem gene families
Why is DNA spiral?
Due to stoichiometry and negative charged phosphates that repel each other. Bases are stacked to be ontop of each other
Why is DNA antiparallel?
Each chain has a 5' end and a 3' end & they run in opposite directions.
Quantitation by Electrophoresis/Fluorescence
Fluorescence intensity is proportional to the total mass of DNA - fluorescence of the sample is compared with that of DNA standards of known concentration to estimate the concentration of the sample.
What are the 2 types of repetitive DNA?
Functional and non-functional
What system is best for determining quality of NA?
Gel electrophoresis
genes vs alleles
Genes: - units of information about heritable traits - distributed among chromosomes (eukaryotes) - each gene has a particular locus Alleles: - different forms of a gene. - arise through mutation - diploid cell will have a pair at each locus - can be homogenous or heterozygous
Homozygous
Genetically identical pair of alleles
Genotype
The combination of alleles in a genome (genetic potential)
Euchromatin
The less condensed form of eukaryotic chromatin that is available for transcription (genetically active)
Phenotype
The observable traits
True or false: only mRNA has a poly A tail out of all RNA
True