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PFGE Pulsed Field Gel Electrophoresis

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Hind III 400. Bam HI 2275. Bgl II 600. KanR. Extract the fragments for the gel ... Digest with Hind III and Bam HI. 3755. 2332. 1875. E. coli strains ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: PFGE Pulsed Field Gel Electrophoresis


1
PFGE - Pulsed Field Gel Electrophoresis
  • Horizontal gel electrophoresis is the most common
    means of separating DNA molecules 0.1 to 30 kb in
    size. This technique employs a continuous and
    homogeneous electrical field and an agarose
    matrix to achieve separation. Since all DNA
    molecules have a similar chargemass ratio and
    hence, a similar velocity when subjected to a
    voltage gradient in an aqueous solution, it is
    the sieving properties of agarose gel that
    determines the degree of separation between DNA
    molecules of different sizes. In general, linear
    DNA molecules of smaller size percolate through
    the pores/channels of the agarose matrix with
    less drag than the larger molecules

2
Problems with Large DNA Molecules
  • difficult to handle agarose gels lt 0.7
  • large DNA (gt30 kb) migrates via reptation
  • reptation results in similar mobilities for large
    molecules
  • Reptation    (r?p-t?sh?n)n.1.(Zool.) The act
    of creeping.

3
  • During continuous field electrophoresis, DNA
    above 30 kb migrates with the same mobility
    regardless of size. This is seen in a gel as a
    single large diffuse band. If, however, the DNA
    is forced to change direction during
    electrophoresis, different sized fragments within
    this diffuse band begin to separate from each
    other.

4
  • PFGE (Pulsed Field Gel Electrophoresis) is a
    technique developed by Schwartz and co-workers in
    1983 which allows very large (up to 12 megabase)
    DNA fragments to be separated on the basis of
    size

5
  • - PFGE works by periodically altering the
    electric field orientation
  • - the large extended coil DNA fragments are
    forced to change orientation
  • - size dependent separation is re-established
    because the time taken for the DNA to reorient is
    size dependent

6
If DNA is too large for conventional
electrophoresis.
7
Pulsed-field electrophoresis
8
Pulse Field Gel Electrophoresis (PFGE)
Electrode configuration of CHEF (contoured-clamp
homogeneous electric field) apparatus
9
  • direction of electric fields alternated at
    defined intervals
  • separation based on ability of DNA to change
    direction
  • small molecules reorient faster
  • up to 10 Mb can be resolved
  • chromosomes of lower eukaryotes
  • long-range restriction maps
  • in situ lysis of cells and restriction digests

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11
Preparation of intact DNA for PFGE
  • - conventional techniques for DNA purification
    (organic extraction, ethanol precipitation)
    produce shear forces
  • - DNA purified is rarely greater than a few
    hundred kb in size
  • - this is clearly unsuitable for PFGE which can
    resolve mb DNA
  • - at the same time as PFGE itself, techniques to
    purify intact genomic DNA needed to be developed
  • - the problem of shear forces was solved by
    performing DNA purification from whole cells
    entirely within a LMT agarose matrix

12
  • 1) intact cells are mixed with molten LMT agarose
    and set in a mold forming agarose plugs
  • 2) enzymes and detergents diffuse into the plugs
    and lyse cells
  • 3) proteinase K diffuses into plugs and digests
    proteins
  • 4) if necessary restriction digests are performed
    in plugs (extensive washing or PMSF treatment is
    required to remove proteinase K activity)
  • 5) plugs are loaded directly onto PFGE and run

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14
Rare Cutter Restriction Enzymes
  • - using the same restriction enzymes as
    conventional molecular biology will result in DNA
    fragments which are far to small for studying
    whole genomes
  • - rare cutter restriction endonucleases cut
    genomic DNA with far less frequency than
    conventional REs such as HindIII, BamHI etc.
  • - many rare cutter REs have 6-bp (or longer)
    recognition sites eg. NotI GC? GGCCGC
  • -

15
  • suitable rare cutter enzymes have to be
    determined experimentally for each new species
  • - in many cases the frequency of cutting is
    highly species dependent eg. BamHI will cut far
    less frequently on a low GC genome when compared
    to a intermediate or high GC content genome

16
Applications
  • Applications of PFGE are numerous and diverse.
    These include cloning large plant DNAs,
    identifying restriction fragment length
    polymorphisms (RFLP's) and construction of
    physical maps detecting in vivo chromosome
    breakage and degradation and determining the
    number and size of chromosomes ("electrophoretic
    karyotype") from yeasts, fungi, and parasites
    such as Leishmania, Plasmodium, and Trypanosoma.
  • PFGE is used to create a DNA "fingerprint" to
    detect and track bacterial strains associated
    with foodborne outbreaks. E. coli 0157H7,
    Shigella, or Salmonella are "fingerprinted" by
    PFGE .

17
Saccharomyces cercevisiae chromosomes (245-2190
kb).
18
CLONING VECTORS
  • In gene cloning, once recombinant DNA is
    constructed, it is introduced into a bacterial or
    eukaryotic host. In the host, recombinant DNA has
    to be maintained, replicated and passed from one
    generation to another. This is achieved by
    introducing recombinant DNA into a cell on a DNA
    vehicle called cloning vector.

19
  • The most commonly used vectors are plasmid
    cloning vectors.
  • Other vector types include bacteriophages,
    cosmids and artificial chromosomes.
  • Vector types differ in the molecular properties
    they have and in the maximum size of DNA that can
    be cloned into each.

20
Plasmids
  • ARTIFICIALLY CONSTRUCTED PLASMIDS USED AS CLONING
    VEHICLES ARE CALLED PLASMID CLONING VECTORS

21
MAIN FEATURES OF THE CLONING VECTOR
  • Origin of replication
  • Selectable Marker
  • Multiple cloning site

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24
  • Different types of cloning vectors are used for
    different types of cloning experiments. The
    vector is chosen according to the size and type
    of DNA to be cloned.
  • Plasmid vectors are used to clone DNA ranging in
    size from several base pairs to several thousands
    of base pairs.
  • Bacteriophage lambda vectors are used to clone
    DNA fragments in the range of 10,000 - 20,000
    base pairs.
  • Yeast Artificial Chromosomes (YACs) can be used
    for cloning of hundreds of thousands of base
    pairs.
  • Retroviral vectors are used to introduce new or
    altered genes into the genomes of human and
    animal cells.

25
A simple cloning exercise
26
  • pAMP
  • 4539 base pairs
  • a single replication origin
  • a gene (ampr) conferring resistance to the
    antibiotic ampicillin
  • a single occurrence of the BamHI restriction
    site
  • a single occurrence of the HindIII restriction
    site
  • Treatment of pAMP with a mixture of BamHI and
    HindIII produces
  • a fragment of 3755 base pairs carrying both the
    ampr gene and the replication origin
  • a fragment of 784 base pairs
  • both fragments have sticky ends

27
Hind III 400
pKAN 4207 bp
Bam HI 2275
KanR
Bgl II 600
  • pKAN
  • 4207 base pairs
  • a single replication origin
  • a gene (kanr) conferring resistance to the
    antibiotic kanamycin.
  • a single site cut by BamHI
  • a single site cut by HindIII
  • Treatment of pKAN with a mixture of BamHI and
    HindIII produces
  • a fragment of 2332 base pairs
  • a fragment of 1875 base pairs with the kanr gene
    (but no origin of replication)
  • both fragments have sticky ends

28
Extract the fragments for the gel Mix together in
a ligation reaction -ligase -14 C
29
pKAN pAMP
Hind III 400
pKAN 4207 bp
Bam HI 2275
KanR
Bgl II 600
30
Xba I 200
Hind III ?
Hind III 300
pAMP 4539 bp
AmpR
Bam HI 1184
Bgl II 1600
AmpR
pKAN pAMP ????bp
KanR
Hind III 400
pKAN 4207 bp
Bam HI ?
Bam HI 2275
KanR
Bgl II 600
31
Transformation
  • Competent cells

32
  • Competent Cells
  • Since DNA is a very hydrophilic molecule, it
    won't normally pass through a bacterial cell's
    membrane. In order to make bacteria take in the
    plasmid, they must first be made "competent" to
    take up DNA. This is done by creating small holes
    in the bacterial cells by suspending them in a
    solution with a high concentration of calcium.
    DNA can then be forced into the cells by
    incubating the cells and the DNA together on ice,
    placing them briefly at 42 C (heat shock), and
    then putting them back on ice. This causes the
    bacteria to take in the DNA. The cells are then
    plated out on antibiotic containing media.

33
  • Transforming E. coli
  • Treatment of E. coli with the mixture of
    religated molecules will produce some colonies
    that are able to grow in the presence of both
    ampicillin and kanamycin.
  • A suspension of E. coli is treated with the
    mixture of religated DNA molecules.
  • The suspension is spread on the surface of agar
    containing both ampicillin and kanamycin.
  • The next day, a few cells resistant to both
    antibiotics will have grown into visible
    colonies containing billions of transformed
    cells.
  • Each colony represents a clone of transformed
    cells.

34
  • Digest with Hind III and Bam HI

3755
2332
1875
35
E. coli strains
  • E. coli is a commonly used host for propagating
    DNA sequences cloned into plasmid vectors.
    Wild-type E. coli is not a suitable host.
  • Cloning E. colis are engineered.
  • For example nearly all the strains of E. coli
    carry mutations in RecA

36
Phage Cloning Vectors
  • Fragments up to 23 kb can be may be accommodated
    by a phage vector
  • Lambda is most common phage
  • 60 of the genome is needed for lytic pathway.
  • Segments of the Lambda DNA is removed and a
    stuffer fragment is put in.
  • The stuffer fragment keeps the vector at a
    correct size and carries marker genes that are
    removed when foreign DNA is inserted into the
    vector.
  • Example Charon 4A Lambda
  • When Charon 4A Lambda is intact,
    beta-galactosidase reacts with X-gal and the
    colonies turn blue.
  • When the DNA segment replaces the stuffer region,
    the lac5 gene is missing, which codes for
    beta-galactosidase, no beta-galactosidase is
    formed, and the colonies are white.

37
Cosmid Cloning Vectors
  • Fragments from 30 to 46 kb can be accommodated by
    a cosmid vector.
  • Cosmids combine essential elements of a plasmid
    and Lambda systems.
  • Cosmids are extracted from bacteria and mixed
    with restriction endonucleases.
  • Cleaved cosmids are mixed with foreign DNA that
    has been cleaved with the same endonuclease.
  • Recombinant cosmids are packaged into lambda
    caspids
  • Recombinant cosmid is injected into the bacterial
    cell where the rcosmid arranges into a circle and
    replicates as a plasmid. It can be maintained and
    recovered just as plasmids.

Shown above is a 50,000 base-pair long DNA
molecule bound with six EcoRI molecules, and
imaged using the atomic force microscope. This
image clearly indicates the six EcoRI "sites" and
allows an accurate restriction enzyme map of the
cosmid to be generated. http//homer.ornl.gov/cbp
s/afmimaging.htm
38
Bacterial Artificial Chromosomes(BACs) and
  • BACs can hold up to 300 kbs.
  • The F factor of E.coli is capable of handling
    large segments of DNA.
  • Recombinant BACs are introduced into E.coli by
    electroportation ( a brief high-voltage current).
    Once in the cell, the rBAC replicates like an F
    factor.
  • Example pBAC108L
  • Has a set of regulatory genes, OriS, and repE
    which control F-factor replication, and parA and
    parB which limit the number of copies to one or
    two.
  • A chloramphenicol resistance gene, and a cloning
    segment.

39
Yeast Artificial Chromosomes(YACs)
  • YACs can hold up to 500 kbs.
  • YACs are designed to replicate as plasmids in
    bacteria when no foreign DNA is present. Once a
    fragment is inserted, YACs are transferred to
    cells, they then replicate as eukaryotic
    chromosomes.
  • YACs contain a yeast centromere, two yeast
    telomeres, a bacterial origin of replication, and
    bacterial selectable markers.
  • YAC plasmid?Yeast chromosome
  • DNA is inserted to a unique restriction site, and
    cleaves the plasmid with another restriction
    endonuclease that removes a fragment of DNA and
    causes the YAC to become linear. Once in the
    cell, the rYAC replicates as a chromosome, also
    replicating the foreign DNA.
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