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LT2 Gene Expression Introduction

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Introduction to the module course - just overview of terms and topics

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  • April 9, 2016
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  • 2014/2015
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Genetic Structure and expression – introduction to genetic
engineering

Genes

- What are they, where are they
- Central Dogma – transcription and translation
- In eukaryotes the coding region of a gene is often broken up by introns
- These introns are removed in the nucleus when mRNA is processed
- Only exons actually code for proteins – prokaryotic genes don’t usually have
introns

Mitochondria

 Although most of our DNA resides in
chromosomes in the nucleus of the cell, there
are structures in the cytoplasm of
eukaryotes, called mitochondria that have
their own DNA
 These mitochondria are the cells power
stations
 Cells contain between 200 – 100, 000
mitochondria
 Mitochondrial DNA – Mitochondrial DNA,
unlike nuclear DNA, is naked (ie. it is not
associated with histones or other proteins)
and circular
 Mitochondrial DNA is very gene rich and
contains very little “junk” DNA
 Mitochondrial DNA has a higher mutation rate than nuclear DNA
 Mitochondrial DNA inheritance – found in males and females: because sperm
does not contribute its mitochondria to the fertilised egg we only inherit our
mothers mitochondrial DNA
 Can be used to investigate female-specific migration history




Genetic Engineering

- Definition?
- Natural Events which alter or Rearragnge DNA sequences
- Mutations
- Viral Infection
- Bacterial Infection

, - Transposons, insertion sequences
- DNA uptake (transformation or conjugation) and recombination (eg. Bacteria and
fungi)
- Meiosis (sex)

Recombinant DNA technology allows you to:

- Isolate a specific gene
- Amplify to manageable amounts
- “Immortalise” by cloning (plasmids etc.)
- Read DNA sequence
- Manipulate (make specific changes, join to other DNA sequences)
- Insert into another organism (eg. Human gene expressed in goat’s milk)

Theoretical considerations in gene manipulations

- Do all organisms use DNA as the genetic material: yes , except some viruses
- Is DNA chemically identical in all species? No – methylation in most eukaryotes –
different in different species
- Is he genetic code universal? – Almost – minor differences in mtDNA of some
species
- Do all species use the same complement of amino acids? Yes.
- Are DNA control sequences the same? – No. Determined by the proteins present
– also tissue specific

Theoretical consideration s in gene manipulation

- Can DNA sequences be determined? – Yes: but only <1000 base pairs at a time
- Can DNA be cut and joined in a precise way? Yes – restriction endonucleases and
ligases
- Can DNA be synthesised in vitro? Yes – but only up to - 10, 000 base pairs
- Can DNA be replicated in vitro: Yes: PCR, cloning

Applications of DNA technology

1. Basic knowledge of biology:
- DNA and protein sequences
- Overexpression and characterisation of proteins
- Analysis of gene structure, expression, control
- “Reverse genetics” using deletion mutagenesis
- Site-directed mutagenesis
- Evolution, taxonomy, kinship
2. Production of proteins (industrial and therapeutic)
3. Diagnosis of disease
4. DNA profiling, forensics
5. Transgenic plants/animals (increase yield, resistance to pests/disease)

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