Practical molecular biology

29
Practical molecular biology Dr. Alexei Gratchev Prof. Dr. Julia Kzhyshkowska Prof. Dr. W. Kaminski

description

Practical molecular biology. Dr. Alexei Gratchev Prof. Dr. Julia Kzhyshkowska Prof. Dr. W. Kaminski. Course structure. 08.10Plasmids, restriction enzymes, analytics 09.10Genomic DNA, RNA 10.10PCR, real-time (quantitative) PCR 11.10Protein analysis IHC 12.10Flow cytometry (FACS). - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Practical molecular biology

Page 1: Practical molecular biology

Practical molecular biology

Dr. Alexei GratchevProf. Dr. Julia Kzhyshkowska

Prof. Dr. W. Kaminski

Page 2: Practical molecular biology

Course structure 08.10 Plasmids, restriction enzymes,

analytics 09.10 Genomic DNA, RNA 10.10 PCR, real-time (quantitative) PCR 11.10 Protein analysis IHC 12.10 Flow cytometry (FACS)

Page 3: Practical molecular biology

Nucleic acid chemistry

•DNA (deoxyribonucleic acid) and RNA (ribonucleic acid) store and transfer genetic information in living organisms.• DNA:

– major constituent of the nucleus– stable representation of an organism’s complete genetic makeup

• RNA:– found in the nucleus and the cytoplasm– key to information flow within a cell

Page 4: Practical molecular biology

Why purifying genomic DNA?

Many applications require purified DNA. Purity and amount of DNA required (and process used)

depends on intended application. Example applications: Tissue typing for organ transplant Detection of pathogens Human identity testing Genetic research

Page 5: Practical molecular biology

DNA purification challenges

1. Separating DNA from other cellular components such as proteins, lipids, RNA, etc.

2. Avoiding fragmentation of the long DNA molecules by mechanical shearing or the action of endogenous nucleases.

Effectively inactivating endogenous nucleases (DNase enzymes) and preventing them from digesting the genomic DNA is a key early step in the purification process. DNases can usually be inactivated by use of heat or chelating agents.

Page 6: Practical molecular biology

DNA purification

There are many DNA purification methods. All must:1. Effectively disrupt cells or tissues

(usually using detergent)

2. Denature proteins and nucleoprotein complexes(a protease/denaturant)

3. Inactivate endogenous nucleases(chelating agents)

4. Purify nucleic acid target away from other nucleic acids and protein(could involve RNases, proteases, selective matrix and alcohol precipitations)

Page 7: Practical molecular biology

Denaturing agents Ionic detergents, such as SDS, disrupt hydrophobic

interactions and hydrogen bonds. Chaotropic agents such as urea and guanidine disrupt

hydrogen bonds. Reducing agents break disulfide bonds. Salts associate with charged groups and at low or

moderate concentrations increase protein solubility. Heat disrupts hydrogen bonds and nonpolar interactions.

Some DNA purification methods incorporate proteases such as proteinase K to digest proteins.

Page 8: Practical molecular biology

DNA isolation

DNA must be separated from proteins and cellular debris.Separation Methods Organic extraction Salting out Selective DNA binding to a solid support

Page 9: Practical molecular biology

Organic extraction DNA is polar and therefore insoluble in organic solvents. Traditionally, phenol:chloroform is used to extract DNA. When phenol is mixed with the cell lysate, two phases

form. DNA partitions to the (upper) aqueous phase, denatured proteins partition to the (lower) organic phase.

DNA is a polar molecule because of the negatively charged phosphate backbone.

This polarity makes it more soluble in the polar aqueous phase.

Page 10: Practical molecular biology

Genomic DNA isolation: phenol extraction

1:1 phenol : chloroform or25:24:1 phenol : chloroform : isoamyl alcohol

Phenol: denatures proteins, precipitates form at interface between aqueous and organic layer

Chloroform: increases density of organic layer Isoamyl alcohol: prevents foaming

Genomic DNA is isolated as pieces up to 1 Mbp!

Page 11: Practical molecular biology

Genomic DNA isolation: phenol extraction

Page 12: Practical molecular biology

Binding to a support material

Most modern DNA purification methods are based on purification of DNA from crude cell lysates by selective binding to a support material.

Support Materials Silica Anion-exchange resinAdvantages Speed and convenience No organic solvents Amenable to automation/miniaturizationDisadvantage DNA fragmentation

Page 13: Practical molecular biology

Silica matrix based genomic DNA isolation

Page 14: Practical molecular biology

Genomic DNA analysis

Page 15: Practical molecular biology

Concentration measurement

Photometric measurement of DNA concentrationUV 260 nmConc=50xOD260

Page 16: Practical molecular biology

Total cellular RNA

•Messenger RNA (mRNA): 1-5%Serves as a template for protein synthesis

• Ribosomal RNA (rRNA): >80%Structural component of ribosomes

• Transfer RNA (tRNA): 10-15%Translates mRNA information into the appropriate amino acid

Page 17: Practical molecular biology

What RNA is needed for?

Messenger RNA synthesis is a dynamic expression of the genome of an organism. As such, mRNA is central to information flow within a cell.

• Size – examine differential splicing• Sequence – predict protein product• Abundance – measure expression levels• Dynamics of expression – temporal, developmental, tissue specificity

Page 18: Practical molecular biology

RNA isolation

Page 19: Practical molecular biology

RNA purification

•Total RNA from biological samples– Organic extraction– Affinity purification

• mRNA from total RNA– Oligo(dT) resins

• mRNA from biological samples– Oligo(dT) resins

Page 20: Practical molecular biology

Total RNA purification

•Goal: Isolate RNA from cellular components– Cells or tissue must be rapidly and efficiently disrupted– Inactivate RNases– Denature nucleic acid-protein complexes– RNA selectively partitioned from DNA and protein

• Isolation from different tissues/sources raises different issues

Page 21: Practical molecular biology

RNases

• RNases are naturally occurring enzymes that degrade RNA

• Common laboratory contaminant (from bacterial and human sources)

• Also released from cellular compartments during isolation of RNA from biological samples

• Can be difficult to inactivate

Page 22: Practical molecular biology

Protecting agains RNases

• Wear gloves at all times• Use RNase-free tubes and pipet tips• Use dedicated, RNase-free, chemicals• Pre-treat materials with extended heat (180°C for several hours), wash with DEPC-treated water, NaOHor H2O2

• Supplement reactions with RNase inhibitors• Include a chaotropic agent (guanidine) in the procedure– Chaotropic agents such as guanidine inactivate and precipitate RNases and other proteins

Page 23: Practical molecular biology

Organic extraction of total RNA

Page 24: Practical molecular biology

Advantages• Versatile - compatible with a variety of sample types• Scalable - can process small and large samples• Established and proven technology• Inexpensive

Disadvantages• Organic solvents• Not high-throughput• RNA may contain contaminating genomic DNA

Organic extraction of total RNA

Page 25: Practical molecular biology

Affinity purification of total RNA

Page 26: Practical molecular biology

Advantages• Eliminates need for organic solvents• Compatible with a variety of sample types (tissue, tissue culture cells, white blood cells, plant cells, bacteria, yeast, etc.)• DNase treatment eliminates contaminating genomic DNA• Excellent RNA purity and integrity

Affinity purification of total RNA

Page 27: Practical molecular biology

RNA analysis

Photometric measurement of RNA concentrationUV 260 nmConc=40xOD260

Page 28: Practical molecular biology

Alternative nucleic acids purification protocol

CsCl gradient centrifugation The best quality of RNA RNA and DNA isolated simultaneously has a 36h centrifugation step

Page 29: Practical molecular biology

Questions?