Using living organisms, or the products of living organisms, for human benefit to make a product or solve a problem
What fields rely on Biotechnology
a) Human, animal/plant physiology
b) Mathematics
c) Molecular and call biology
d) Immunology
e) Computer Science
f) Chemical engineering
g) Genetics
h) Bioinformatics
i) Biochemistry
Define the following vocabulary:
A) Gene cloning
B) Recombinant DNA technology
C) Genetic engineering
D) Human Genome Project
A) ability to identify and copy/clone a gene of interest
B) technique enabling DNA to be combined from different sources
C) altering an organism's DNA
D) international effort to identify all human genes and their loci
What are the seven types of biotechnology?
1) Microbial
2) Agricultural
3) Animal
4) Forensic
5) Bioremediation
6) Aquatic
7) Medical
What are Microbial Biotechnology uses?
-use of microorganisms to make valuable products & applications
-create better enzymes
-simplify manufacturing and production processes
-make vaccines & batch amounts of proteins for human medicine
-make more efficient decontamination processes for industrial waste removal
How did people get insulin from?
They extracted and purified it from pigs and cows
1) What are Agricultural Biotechnology uses?
2) What do scientists genetically engineer plants to:
1)
-genetically engineer plants to make valuable products
2)
-be more environmentally friendly and yield more per acre (genetically engineered)
-resistance to diseases and insects
-drought-resistant and tolerant to cold temperatures
-foods with higher protein or vitamin content
-drugs developed and grown as plant products
1) What are the uses of Animal Biotechnology?
2) What does transgenic animal mean?
3) And what transgenic animal did human milk to get what anti-clotting proteins?
1)
-genetically engineer animals to make valuable products
-used "bioreactors" for producing medically valuable proteins
-used as model organisms
-organismal cloning
2) Way to achieve large scale production of therapeutic proteins from animals for use in humans
3) Goats and Atryn
1) What does Gene knockout do and how does that help researchers?
2) Which animals do gene knockout are usually performed on?
1) Disrupt a gene in the animal and then look at what functions are affected in the animal due to the knockout.
-It helps determine the role and function of the gene
2) Rats and mice
Forensic Biotechnology is define as what and what are some uses of it?
-Analysis and application of biological evidence as DNA sequence data to detect an organisms unique DNA pattern.
-Uses scientist utilize DNA finger printing to:
a) solve crimes
b) determine paternity
c) identify human remains
d) track and confirm organisms that spread disease
e) determine identity of mystery meats
Bioremediation Biotechnology define as what and what are some of its uses?
-Use of living organisms to process, degrade, and clean up naturally occurring or human-made pollutants in the environment
-The use of biotechnology to process and degrade a variety of natural and human-made substances. Particularly those that contribute to environmental pollution.
-Adding nutrients to stimulate growth of bacteria to clean up an oil spill
-Scientists utilize living organisms to:
a) break down oil
b) degrade human waste (wastewater treatmant)
c) degrade hazardous materials
d) bioaccumulate heavy metals
Aquatic Biotechnology define as what and what are some of its uses?
-Use of aquatic organisms such as finfish,shellfish, marine bacteria and aquatic plants for biotechnology applications
-Raising finfish or shellfish in controlled conditions for use as food sources
Scientists utilize living aqautic organisms to:
a) genetically engineer disease-resistant strains of oysters
b) develop vaccines against viruses of salmon and other finfish
c) genetically engineer salmon to overproduce growth hormone
d) obtain rich and valuable sources of new genes (bio prospecting)
Medical Biotechnology define as what and what are some of its uses?
-Use of organisms to improve the entire spectrum of human health and medicine
Scientists utilize organisms or their products to provide:
a) diagnosis of health and illness
b) preventative medicine
c) treatment of human diseases
d) gene therapy
-CAR (chimeric antigen receptor) T-cell therapy is a type of cancer immunotherapy treatment
Comparison of Prokaryotic & Eukaryotic cells
Prokaryotic Cells
-True bacteria (eubacteria)
-Archaebacteria
-No nucleus; DNA located in the cytoplasm. No organelles
Eukaryotic Cells
-Protists, fungi, plant, animals cells
-DNA enclosed in a membrane-bound cytoplasm.Nucleus. Many organelles.
-Two strains of bacteria (Streptococcus pneumoniae)
-virulent disease caused by smooth strains (S cells)
-S cells are surrounded by capsule (smooth coat)
-harmeless rough strain (R cells)
-R cells lack the capsule
What happened to the mice that were injected with either:
A) Dies
B) Lives
C) Lives
D) Dies
Define transformation?
Process by which bacteria take in DNA from the surrounding
DNA is made up of nucleotides:
1) What are the three characteristic that make up a nucleotide?
2) What are the four bases that make up nucleotides?
3) RNA is also made up nucleotides similar to DNA, give two major differences between RNA and DNA structure.
1)
a) Pentose (5-carbon) sugar called deoxrubose
b) A nitrogenous base
c) Phosphate molecule
2)
a) Adenine
b) Thymine
c) Guanine
d) Cytosine
3) RNA uses Uracil instead of Thymine for its bases
-In it's 2' it has an OH group instead of H
1) Name the DNA bases that are purines and pyrimidines.
2) What physical characteristics make them different from each other?
1)
Purines:
a) Adenine
b) Guanine
Pyrimidines:
a) Thymine
b) Cytosine
c) Uracil
2)
Purines: are two or more rings connected together
pyrimidines are just one ring
1) DNA molecules consist of what?
2) What are phosphodiester bonds?
3) What part of an oligonucleotide and incoming nucelotide does the phosphodiester bond connect?
1) Consist of two strands that join together and warp around each other to form a double helix
2) Bond that holds nucleotides together in a strand
3) it connects each strand by its polarity of 5'end and 3' end
1) Two strand of DNA molecules are held by what type of bond?
2) Why does the DNA strand have a twisted ladder shape?
1) Hydrogen bond
2) Due to the antiparallel force from their polarity being reversed to each other
1) Define chromatin?
2) Define chromosomes
3) Define gametes?
4) Define chromatid
5) Define centromere
6) Define kinetochore
7) Define telomere
1) strings of DNA wrapped around DNA-binding proteins called histones
2) tightly coiled arrangement of DNA & proteins
3) sex cells contain a single set of 23 chromosomes
4) one copy of newly replicated chromosome
-sister chromatids are exact replicas of each other
5) region consisting of intertwined DNA and protein
-delineates sister chromatid into 2 arms-p and q
6) proteins that attach chromosomes to microtubules
1) way to study chromosome number and basic aspects of chromosome structure
2) sequence of nucleotides that provides cells with instructions to synthesize a protein or type of RNA
3) not all genes are templates to produce a protein
ex. genes involved in making tRNA\
4) all of the DNA in an organism's cell
5) Map out or identify all the genes in the human body
1) Whats the process that somatic cells divide by?
2) Define mitosis?
3) Whats the process that sex cells divide by?
4) Define meiosis?
5) Define zygote?
1) Mitosis
2) A process where one cell divides to form two daughter cells
-Prior to mitosis DNA replication must occur which happens during interphase
3) Meiosis
4) Parent cell divides to create 4 daughter cells
-DNA replication must occur prior to meiosis
5) A fertilized egg which has the complete set of 46 chromosomes
1) What's reductional division?
2) What is semi-conservation replication?
3) Define helicase
4) Define DNA Primase
5) Define DNA Polymerase
1) Where meiosis 1 creates a haploid cell
2) DNA replication results in one original (parental) DNA strand and one newly synthesized DNA strand
3) Enzyme breaks the hydrogen bonds between complimentary base pairs that hold the two DNA strands together, "unzips" DNA
4) Enzymes synthesize RNA primers; known as an RNA polymerase
5) Enzyme that synthesizes new strands of DNA
Name the steps in DNA Replication and what they do in those steps?
1) Unwinding the DNA
-Helicase unzips the DNA two strands then the single-strand binding proteins bind to the complementary strand of DNA and prevent them from base pairing and reforming a double helix
2) Adding RNAprimers
- RNA primers start the replication process because they serve as binding site for DNA Polymerase
3) Copying the DNA
-DNA polymerase enzyme binds to the RNA primers
-Reads/Scans in one direction 3 to 5
-Works/Synthesizes in one direction 5 to 3
1) Whys is it discontinuous on the lagging strand?
2) Replication in leading and lagging strands are what?
1) RNA primers are replaced with DNA nucleotides using DNA Pol
-Shot Okazaki fragments are synthesized as DNA Pol works on lagging strand
2) Lagging is discontinuous and Leading is continuous
1) Define Transcription
2) Define Translation
3) Define Central dogma
1) Genes are copied (transcribed from DNA code into RNA code
2) RNA code (exact copies of genes) is read into protein
3) Exxplainsthat DNA codes for RNA, which codes for protein
1) Define RNA polymerase
2) Define Transcription factor
3) Define Enhancers
1) Binds to a promoter region
-Unwinds DNA helix
-Copies "works" one strand of DNA into RNA
-Template strands is read 3'-5' & works 5'-3'
2) Are DNA binding proteins that can bind to promoters
-Help RNA Pol find the promoter
-Can speed up or stop transcription
3) Are DNA nucleotides that play role in transcription
Are the RNA polymerase and newly formed strand RNA are released from DNA molecule
a) Define mRNA
b) Define tRNA
c) Define rRNA
a) copy of gene (acts as messenger by carrying genetic code from nucleus to cytoplasm where info is read into protein)
b) molecules that transport amino acids to ribosomes during protein synthesis
c) short single-stranded RNA molecules and are components of ribosomes
1) mRNA Processing is what?
2) What are the three modifications necessary for protein synthesis and what are their function?
1) The production of immature and not fully functional mRNA
2)
a) Addition of a 5' cap- guanine base containing methyl group allows ribosome recognition
b) Splice out DNA not coding for proteins (introns)
-retain the protein coding sequence of the gene (exons)
-alternative splicing-multiple proteins produced from single gene
c) 3' Poly A tail- 100-300 adenine nucleotides added to protect mRNA from RNA degrading enzymes
-increases its stability and availability for translation
1) How is RNA read?
2) Define codons?
3) whats is the start codon?
4) What are the stop codons?
1) By genetic code a universal language of genetics used by virtually all living organisms
2) Three nucleotides units of mRNA
3) AUG
4) UGA, UAA,UAG
1) What do Ribosomes do?
2) tRNA what is it and what does it do?
1) Aggregates containing rRNA and protein
-Contains 2 subunits small (18S) and large (28S)
-Associate to form 2 grooves A (aminoacyl) and P (peptidly)
-E site where tRNA molecules leave the ribosome
2) small molecules that folds into cloverleaf ctructure
-Has site for amino acid attachment by the enzyme aminoacyl tRNA synthetase
-Opposite end of tRNA is anticodon
-Aminoacyl "charged" tRNA binds to the A site of ribosome
-Each tRNA anticodon to its complementary codon
Stages of translation are three of them, name and say about their function.
1) Initiation- is the recruitment of ribosome to mRNA and recognition of the start codon
2) Elongation- is the stepwise addition of amino acids to the growing protein chain
3) Termination- is the process by which a completed polypeptide and mRNA is released from the ribosome
What happens during initiation?
-Protein factors around start codon help guide small ribosome subunits to mRNA
-Small subunit binds to 5' end of mRNA by recognition of 5' Cap
-Small ribosome subunit moves along the mRNA until the start codon is found
-Small subunit waits for correct tRNA (initiator tRNA)
-Now large subunit binds to complex containing: mRN; initiation factors; small subunit; and initiator tRNA
1) What happens in elongation?
2) Peptidyl transferase does what?
3) Translocation phase does what?
1) tRNA, carrying that correct amino acid, enters the ribosome at the A site, one at a time as the mRNA code is read
2) Catalyzes formation of peptide bond between 2 AA's attached to their tRNAs
3) Ribosomes shifts forward 5' to 3' tRNA and protein move into P site
What happens in termination?
-Ribosome encounters the stop codon near the end of mRNA
-Releasing factor proteins interact with the stop codon to terminate translation
-Ribosomal subunits come apart and release the mRNA, and newly formed protein
Gene expression is defined as what?
Refers to the production of mRNA by a cell and sometimes protein.
-All cells of an organism contain the same genome.
-Not all genes will be turned on at the same time some will be upregulated while others will be silenced or downregulated
1) Gene regulation is defined as what?
2) Give the levels of gene expression:
1) how genes can be turned on and off in response to different signals
2)
-Chromatin domains
-Transcription
-Post-transcriptional modification
-RNA transport
-Translation
-Post-translational modification
-mRNA degradation
-Protein degradation
1) Transcriptional regulation defines as what?
2) Promoter defines as what?
3) What are transcription factors?
4) What are specific transcription factors?
1) Controlling the amount of mRNA transcribed from a particular gene as a way to turn genes on or off
2) DNA sequence located upstream from gene
-Found in TATA box and CAAT box
3) DNA binding proteins
4) Genes that bind specific regulatory sequences next to the promoter
Define Enhancers and Activators.
1) Enhancers: DNA sequences which are often located upstream of promoter that can bind to activators.
2) Activators: regulatory receptor protein complex (activators) binds to androgen response element (specific enhancer)
What are operons?
-Clusters of several related genes located together and controlled by a single promoter
-Operator-region within promoter
-Regulate gene expression in response to their nutrient requirments
1) What do the following lac's do:
a) lac z
b) lac y
c) lac A
d) lacI
2) What happens if there is only lactose or glucose?
a) Codes for Beta Galactosidase (B Gal)
-Breaks down lactose to glucose and galactose
b) Codes for permease
-A membrane protein that transports lactose into the cell
c) Codes for Transacetylase
-Has a protective function
d) Codes for repredor protein
2)
a) Lactose, it acts as an inducer by binding to the repressor protein and changes its shape so it falls off the operator and allows RNA Pol transcribe the 3 genes
b) Glucose, the repressor stays bound and prevents transcription
a) Define RNA interference
b) Define small (short) interfering RNA (siRNA)
c) Define micro RNA
a) Non-coding RNA mechanisms of gene silencing
b) Begin in the cytoplasm
-derived from long double stranded RNA
-binds to mRNA and regulates gene expression cleaving mRNA
-silences specific target mRNA (single gene); no translation
c) Begins in the nucleus
-initially single stranded non-coding RNA
-miRNA silence gene expression by inhibiting translation of mRNA or causing degradation of mRNA
-a single miRNA can regulate the expression of many genes
1) Define Mutations
2) Define the following types of mutations
-Point mutations (Transition vs Transversion)
a) Silente mutations
b) Missense mutations
c) Nonsense mutations
d) Frameshift mutations
1) Change in the nucleotide sequence of DNA
-Can effect cells by changing the properties of the protein which affects the trait
-Can spontaneous or induced by environmental factors including X-rays and UV
2)
Transitions mean purines turning into other purines and pyrimidines turning into other pyrimidines
Transversion pyrimidines turning into purines and purines turning into pyrimidines
a) Where a change in the gene doesn't have any effect in the sequence
b) A mutation that causes a single nucleotide to be changed causing the following amino acid to have a different function
c) A mutation that causes an early stop codon to be read
d) A manual insertion or deletion of a single nucleotide
1) Gene mutations can be _____or_____
2) Define Inherited mutations
3) Define Acquired mutations
1) inherited or acquired
2) Passed onto offspring through gametes
-Can cause birth defects or inherited diseases because the mutation is present in the genome of all the offspring's cells
3) Occur in the genome of somatic cells
-Are not passed along to offspring
-These mutations can lead abnormalities in cell growth and ultimately become cancerous
1) Human genomes are what % identical?
2) Mutations have what type of effect?
3) Most genetic variations are created by what?
1) 99.9%
2)Most have no obvious effect; other mutations strongly influence cell functions, behavior, and susceptibility to genetic diseases
3) By SNPs ( single nucleotide polymorphism)-are bad when they occur in exons and change protein structure so ultimately can change protein function
1) Define Epigenome
2) How does Epigenome affect both DNA and histones?
1) Modifications in chromatin structure which do not involve mutations in DNA and histones
2)
-Some are reversible; some are long-lasting
-These changes vary between call types in the body and in normal and diseased tissues
-Diet and environment can influence epidenome
-Involved in patterns of gene expression during development
Major processes of epigenetic modifications define the following:
a) DNA Methylation
b) Acetylated histones
c) Non-coding RNA
a) Typically acts to repress gene transcription
b) Increases levels of gene transcription
c) Mechanisms of gene silencing
1) Phenol does what?
2) The top part of the tube where DNA extraction is needed is called what?
1) Denatures proteins and solubilizes denatured proteins
2) Is called the aqueous layer and contains DNA & RNA
1) Define clone?
2) Define Restriction Enzymes
3) Define DNA Vectors
1) A genetically identical copy of a cell or organism; also the process of making copies of a gene, cell, or organism
2) DNA cutting enzymes (molecular scissors)
3) Circular form of self-replicatingDNA
-Can be manipulated to carry and clone other pieces of DNA
1) Restriction Enzymes do what?
2) Define restriction site
3) Define palindrome
1) Cuts DNA by cleaving the phosphodiester bond that joins adjacent nucleotides in a DNA strand
2) Binds to, recognizes, and cuts DNA within a specific sequence of bases
3) Reads the same forward and backwards on opposite strands of DNA
Restriction enzymes are divide into two describe them:
a) Sticky or cohesive ends
b) Blunt ends
a) Restriction enzymes that cut DNA to create DNA fragments with overhanging single strands ends
b) Restriction enzymes that cut DNA to generate fragments with double-stranded ends
-yield is significantly lower ligating
-can insert in the opposite orientation desired
-blunt ends are always compatible with each other
What are the advantages of sticky ends?
-Preferred for cloning; DNA fragments with sticky ends can be easily joined together because they base pair with each other by forming weak hydrogen bonds
-DNA ligase is used to form a covalent bond between the sugar-phosphate residue of adjacent nucleotides to join the two molecules together
Agarose Gel Electrophoresis:
1) What's the name of the small depressions in the gel?
2) DNA migrates by what?
3) What is the migration rate for large and small fragments?
4) Loading dye contains two things name them. And what's the function of the loading dye?
5) What's the difference when adding 0.5 % or 2% of agarose gel?
1) Wells
2) Charge & size
3) Large fragments move slower and small fragments move after through the gel
4) Ficolland tracking dye. It prevents DNA from escaping well and o monitors DNA samples during migration in gel
5) 0.5% is used to get a variety of DNA bases while 2% is used to get a specific estimate base pair from the DNA
1) Define Plasmid DNA
2) Define vectors
1) Small circular pieces of DNA found primarily in bacteria
2) Pieces of DNA that can accept, carry, and replicate other pieces of DNA
Calcium ChlorideTransforation of Bacteria Cells:
What are the process for inserting foreign DNA into bacteria?
1: Treat bacterial cells with calcium chloride, while chilled on ice for 30 minutes
2: Add plasmid DNA to cells chilled on ice
3: Heat the cell and DNA mixture (30 sec @ 42C)
4: Plasmid DNA enters bacterial cells and is replicated to express their genes
1) Electroporation does what?
2) What are the advantages?
1) Apply brief pulse of high voltage electricity to create tiny holes in bacteria cell wall that allow the DNA to enter
2)
a) Rapid
b) Requires fewer cells
c) Can be used to introduce DNA into other cells types
d) More efficient process
1) Define selection
2) Define Antibiotic selection
1) Is process designed to facilitate the identification of recombinant bacteria from bacteria that contain plasmid without foreign DNA, while preventing the growth of non-transformed bacteria
2) Transformed cells are cultured on plates containing antibiotics to identify transformed bacteria from non-transformed bacteria
-Does not select for plasmid containing foreign DNA (recombinant plasmid) vs. recircularized plasmid with no DNA insert
1) Blue-white selection with X-gal (artificial lactose) in media does what?
2) What does blue and white colony mean?
1)
-DNA is cloned into plasmid restriction site within lacZ gene
-When it is interrupted by an insert gene, the lacz gene cannot produce functional Beta-galactosidase
2)
-White colony = non-functional lacZ = clone = genetically identical bacteria cells each h containing copies of the recombinant plasmid
-Blue colony = functional lacZ
Recombinant DNA Techand DNA Cloning gives some description:
- Clone human insulin DNA sequence inserted into a plasmid and the bacteria cells were then used to synthesize the protein product of the cloned gene
-Can generate lots of pure protein via this technique
FPractical Features of DNA Cloning Vector are the following give a use for them:
a) Size
b) Origin of replication (ori)
c) Copy number
d) Multiple cloning site (MCS)
e) Selectable marker genes
f) RNA polymerase promoter sequences
g) DNA sequencing primers
a) Small enough to be separated from chromosomal DNA of host plasmid
b) Site for DNA replication that allow plasmid to replicate independently from host chromosomes
c) Number of plasmid in the cell; normally small (recombinant plasmids have high copy numbers)
d) Recognition sites for several restriction enzymes in which DNA insert is cloned into