BIO282 Lecture Notes - Dna Ligase, Plasmid, Cloning

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20 Jun 2018
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DNA CLONING
What is cloning
Why do we clone DNA?
Plasmids
Restriction enzymes
DNA Ligase
Vectors
Blue/White screening
To understand:
The reasons for cloning DNA.
The tools used for cloning and how they work.
Plasmids and their uses in DNA cloning
Strategies for differentiating colonies containing recombinant plasmids from those containing
vector plasmids.
Genetic Engineering
A. altering the expression of the existing genes in an organism (the genes are there but we want
to produce more or less) (quantity)
B. adding new genes to an organism
C. modifying the existing genes. (changing the gene to produce a different more efficient gene)
(quality)
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Altering the characteristics of an organism by manipulating the genetic material.
To make any of these changes, you need to clone the ‘gene of interest’ first.
Why Do you Clone a Gene?
What is cloning?
To produce a group of identical cells or organisms.
Cloning word originated from the Greek word Klon=twig. Some plants can be generated from
cuttings (twigs) to produce identical plants.
To study a gene
It’s nucleotide sequence
Amino acid sequence and structure of the encoded protein
Regulation (to know how the gene expression is controlled)
To modify a gene
Structural region
So that it makes a more efficient gene product
regulatory region
promoter strength
To create transgenic organisms (Genetic Engineering)
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a. What are plasmids?
o circular supercoiled DNA molecules in bacterial cells.
o range in size from 4.5 kb to 1500 kb.
o vary in copy number from 1 (e.g. F factor) to > 50
Plasmid is extra chromosomal material inside the cell
They are not the absolute requirement of the cell, therefore if the plasmid is removed
the cell won't die (most of the time)
b. Relaxed and stringent plasmids (relate to their replication)
Relaxed plasmids have multiple copies/cell (uncontrolled replication)Stringent plasmids have
only 1-2 copies/cell (regulated replication).
c. Plasmid incompatibility
Inability of two different plasmids to co-exist in the same cell is called incompatibility.
Plasmids can be grouped into incompatibility groups.
Two plasmids of one incompatibility group cannot exist together.
d. Narrow/specific (only live in certain cells) or broad/wide (they can live in different type of cell)
host-range plasmids.
e. Episomes-Plasmids that can integrate into the bacterial chromosome, and sometimes even
remove themselves from the cell
f. Conjugative plasmids can mediate its own transfer to a new strain.
g. Cryptic plasmids- no known identifiable function
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