Monday, August 5, 2019
Extracting and Analysing Plasmid DNA From E.coli
Extracting and Analysing Plasmid DNA From E.coli    Introduction  Deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) is a molecule present in all living things, and they carry genetic information which determines every characteristic a person can have. DNA contains 4 chemical units: Adenine, Guanine, Thymine and Cytosine. These 4 letters are organized to make genes which contain information to make proteins.  As scientists have discovered, it is the genome (DNA sequence in a particular arrangement of the 4 letters) that makes every human unique. During the first stages of cell division, the human DNA is organized into 46 tightly coiled structures called chromosomes. As a cell divide, the chromosomes are copied over to the new cells, ensuring they receive a full copy of the genetic blueprint.  Objective    Isolate DNA of cheek cells  Extract chromosomal DNA from strawberry  Extract plasmid DNA from E.coli.    General Method  Collect cells  Split cells open and release contents  Destroy enzymes which break apart DNA  Separate DNA from other cell components  Precipitate DNA  General Materials  Solution I  Solution II  Solution III  Tubes of various sizes according to use  Proteinase K (10mg/ml)  Strawberry  Filter funnel  DNA extraction buffer  Chlorofoam  LB Liquid Medium  5M NaCl  70% Ethanol  95% Ethanol  Centrifuge  Hot water bath  Lysis Buffer  DNA of Cheek Cells  Collect cheek cells by rinsing mouth with saline solution  Saline solution prevents cells from splitting open too soon  Spin solution in a centrifuge to collect cells at the bottom of the tube  Empty out the liquid, leaving the cell pellet at the bottom  Add Lysis Buffer (Contains soap, salts and ions, buffers)  Soap: Destroy fatty membranes that enclose cells  Destroy nuclei membranes in the cells  Salts and ions: Bring up osmotic pressure (pressure applied to solution needed to prevent the inflow of water) outside the cell, which helps break apart membranes  Buffer: To maintain pH  Breaks open cells  DNA released into solution  Add Proteinase K  Digest contaminating proteins  Degrades nucleases which attack nucleic acids  Put the solution in hot water bath  Enables Proteinase K to work efficiently  Kill enzymes in the cytoplasm which can break apart DNA  Add 5M NaCl  Change polarity of solution to differentiate DNA from fats, carbohydrates and proteins  DNA dissolves in ionic solutions, the rest do not  Centrifuge solution  Separates DNA (dissolved in clear liquid) from fats, carbohydrates and proteins (solid pellet)  Transfer clear liquid (containing DNA) to new tube  Add cold 95% ethanol to new tube  Precipitate dissolved DNA from ionic solution since DNA is not soluble in alcohol  The colder it is, the less soluble DNA (Can precipitate more)  Coldness slows down enzymatic reactions which can break DNA apart  Centrifuge new tube  Resulting white pellet is DNA of cheek cells  DNA of Strawberry  Mash strawberry  Add DNA extraction buffer (contains shampoo/soap  NaCl) and mash  Shampoo/soap: Dissolves cell membrane which is made up of lipid bilayer  NaCl: Removes proteins that are stuck onto DNA  Prevent proteins from precipitating along with DNA in ethanol  Filter and add cold ethanol  Precipitate DNA  Twirl glass rod at interface between ethanol layer and slurp layer  Resulting sticky mass is the plant DNA  Plasmid DNA of E. coli  Add solution I (contains glucose, Tris, EDTA) to prepared pellet  Glucose: Increase osmotic pressure outside cells  Tris: Maintain constant pH  EDTA (Ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid): Protects DNA from enzymes which will degrade DNA  Add solution II (contains alkali substances  detergent)  Alkali: Breaks open the cells  Break down DNA into single strands  Detergent: Break membrane apart  Add solution III (contains acidic substances)  Neutralizes pH so DNA strands can get back together as double stranded  Precipitates cellular debris  E. coli plasmid DNA remains in solution  Add chloroform  Extract DNA  Centrifuge mixture  Separates plasmid DNA and debris  chromosomal DNA  Transfer some amount of liquid into new tube  Add 95% ethanol  Centrifuge new mixture  Purify plasmid DNA  Pour away liquid and add 70% alcohol  Remove remaining salts  Centrifuge mixture  Pour away liquid and spin the tube  Resulting pellet is plasmid DNA  Discussion/Extensions  Why is DNA extraction important/used for:  Crime and historical identification  Lineage/origin identification  Diagnosis of diseases  Mass produce gene/protein important for treating diseases, using further DNA technology  Genetic engineering  Other DNA extraction methods:  Anion-exchange  Uses chromatography technique  Nucleic acids of DNA are composed of negatively-charged phosphates  Positively-charged substrate used to bind to the negatively-charged phosphates  Proteins and RNA are then removed with medium-salt buffers  Silica Gel  Advantage: Fast, reliable, economical  Uses silica-gel membrane to adsorb nucleic acids of DNA  Catalysts: Chaotropic salts  Buffers used in lysis helps DNA to adsorb on silica-gel membrane, and washes away metabolites and proteins  Salting  Remove proteins and contaminants by using high concentrations of salt  Precipitates removed using centrifuge  DNA recovered with alcohol  Organic extraction  Mix dead cells with phenol, chloroform and alcohol  DNA extracted using alcohol precipitate  Cesium chloride (CsCl)  Mix suspended DNA with CsCl and ethidium bromide  Solution centrifuged  DNA extracted with isopropanol  Limitations  This general method of DNA isolation consists of many limitations:  Inability to remove inhibitors of polymerase chain reaction  Too many steps may be too time-consuming  Multiple tube transfers may increase risk of contaminations by à ¢Ã ¢Ã¢â¬Å¡Ã ¬Ãâ¹Ã
âoutsideà ¢Ã ¢Ã¢â¬Å¡Ã ¬Ã ¢Ã¢â¬Å¾Ã ¢ DNA  Conclusions  This simple experiment provides an introduction to the procedures that are used in modern microbiological laboratories. Other cases can get much more complex, and will involve more sophisticated methods and equipment. The extraction of DNA is the first step of many other fascinating processes, which includes the manufacturing of medicines as well as genetic engineering which alters the genes of organisms.    
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
 
 
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.