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The Human Genome Project

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Title: The Human Genome Project


1
The Human Genome Project
  • Lecture 4
  • Strachan and Read Chapter 8

2
The HGPs primary aims
  • The main aims of the Human Genome Project (HGP)
    were to
  • Construct maps of the genome (genetic and
    physical)
  • Identify all the genes (now known to be about
    30,000)
  • Determine the entire DNA sequence (3,000,000,000
    bp)

3
Other aims of HGP
  • As well as the genome sequence, the aims were
  • Technology development
  • Model organism genome projects (E. coli, yeast,
    mouse, fruit fly, C. elegans)
  • Ethical, legal and societal implications (ELSI)

4
The linkage map
  • The map was built by linkage studies in 60 large
    families with grandparents and large numbers of
    children, collected by the University of Utah and
    the Centre d'Étude du Polymorphisme Humain
    (CEPH), Paris
  • Families were typed with over 5000 polymorphic
    DNA sequences 60 were microsatellite repeats
    (mostly dinucleotide (CA) repeats, also some tri-
    and tetra-nucleotides). Only about 400 of them
    were actual genes
  • Construction of the genetic map
  • Obtain genotypes of all markers on all family
    members (PCR and gel electrophoresis, using
    robots and automated gel apparatus
  • Calculation of recombination fractions between
    markers
  • Observe crossovers between closely linked
    markers, use this information to confirm order of
    markers
  • Construction of the linkage map is a very big
    problem sophisticated software was used to work
    out the "best fit" map of all the markers, with
    advanced statistical methods and algorithms

5
STSs and ESTs
  • Sequence tagged sites (STSs) are specific loci in
    the genome, for which enough DNA sequence is
    available to make PCR primers to amplify the
    locus (usually as a fragment of a few 100bp).
    These include microsatellites (e.g. CA repeats)
    that can be used for linkage studies.
  • The information required to use an STS is just
    the sequences of the PCR primers therefore it is
    very easy to make databases of STSs that can be
    used by anyone. No actual bits of DNA need change
    hands. This is crucial in allowing genome
    projects to proceed as international
    collaborations, with many laboratories
    participating in a co-ordinated way.
  • ESTs act as specific tags for each human gene,
    since they are derived by sequencing cDNA clones
    which came from mRNA and therefore represent the
    actual transcribed sequences (as opposed to STSs,
    which can be derived from anywhere in the genome
    and are mostly non-coding). They allow rapid
    access to the actual genes, ignoring introns and
    junk DNA

6
ESTs can be 3' or 5' depending on which end of
the cDNA was sequenced. Because of the methods
used to make cDNA libraries, parts of the 5' end
of the gene are often lost during cloning whereas
the 3' end is more reliable. Therefore, the same
gene may give different 5' ESTs and it will
difficult to deduce whether they have come from
the same gene. This shown on the diagram by the
white boxes representing cDNA clones being
different lengths. Another complication is due to
alternative splicing. On the left is shown the
genomic structure of a gene, with the exons as
boxes - the red one is subject to alternative
splicing.
7
X-ray hybrid mapping
  • X-ray hybrids are made by irradiating a human
    cell line with 3000 rad of X-rays, fusion to
    hamster cells, and isolation of hybrid cell lines
    in culture
  • A panel of 100-200 hybrids with 5-10 different
    fragments of human DNA in each gives about 1000
    fragments in total, i.e. the human genome has
    been divided into 1000 bits.
  • The closer together 2 markers are in the genome,
    the more likely it is that they will be present
    in the same hybrids (since they are less likely
    to be separated by an X-ray induced break).
  • By doing a PCR assay for each marker on all the
    hybrids, a map can be made. The units are called
    cR (centiray, where 1cR is a 1 chance that the
    markers will be separated by X-ray breakage).

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9
For each pair of markers in turn the
"co-retention frequency" is the number of hybrids
in which both markers are present, divided by the
number of hybrids in which one or other (or both)
markers are present. On the figure, there are 5
hybrids containing both markers B and C, and 6
containing B and/or C. Therefore the co-retention
frequency is 5/6 or 0.83. Likewise it is 6/7 for
markers E and F, and 2/10 for markers C and E.
This shows that B and C are close together, E and
F are close together, but C and E are further
apart. The analysis is extended to all the
markers and their order is worked out by
considering all the co-retention frequencies.
10
Clone contigs
  • A clone contig is a series of cloned DNA segments
    that overlap each other, assembled in the correct
    order along the genome
  • The clones are made using vectors
  • cosmids (capacity 45 kb)
  • BACs or YACs (Bacterial or Yeast Artificial
    Chromosomes) which can clone 100s of kb of DNA -
    more suitable for dealing with large stretches of
    mammalian DNA.

11
Making a clone contig by fingerprinting
12
Putting it together
  • The physical map consists of 1000s of cloned
    genomic DNA fragments, in E coli host cells
    (BACs, cosmids, 40-250kb) or yeast (100-1500kb
    "Yeast artificial chromosomes" or YACs), X-ray
    hybrids, and hundreds of thousands or STSs and
    ESTs.
  • The linkage map contains several thousand STSs.
  • All of these can be linked together to produce an
    integrated genome map.
  • The presence or absence of each STS or EST in
    each X-ray hybrid and cloned DNA is simply
    determined by PCR.
  • Because of the huge numbers involved, automation
    of the assays is required.

13
Sequencing
  • There was a great deal of human genome to
    sequence (3000 Mb, or 3 x 109 bp).
  • Due to the limitations of the techniques, each
    sequencing reaction can only generate up to 700
    bp of DNA sequence.
  • So the total sequence must be assembled from
    millions of short, overlapping bits of sequence.
    The starting point for this is the contigs of
    overlapping BAC clones.
  • Each clone in the contig is subcloned into 100s
    of smaller fragments, using a plasmid vector
    suitable for preparing templates for the DNA
    sequencing reactions.

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