Molecular Genetics (Andy Bailey 23-24) Flashcards

1
Q

What are polyketides?

A

polyketides are complex organic compounds that are often biologically highly active. They’re produced by certain living organisms in order to impart to them some survival advantage.

  • tenellin is used to kill insects and is made by condensation of acetate units and a polypeptide.
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2
Q

How were the genes for polyketide synthases found and how did they get the rest of the gene?

A
  • designed degenerate primers
  • amplified the genome
  • cloned and sequenced the PCR product
  • PCR product was from the right sort of gene but was only a small part of just one expected gene.
  • The rest were found by using the PCR product to probe a Lambda genomic library
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3
Q

How was a Lambda genomic library and primer walking used to find the genes for polyketide synthases?

A
  • sequences were fragmented and overlapping fragments were aligned to their correct order.
  • the gene library can then be screened by hybridisation with a gene probe to identify clones.
  • These sequences were then extended by primer walking (using the sequence to design a new primer over and over)
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4
Q

polyketide synthase genes can occur in clusters and are often co-located. How can we prove we are looking at the right set of genes?

A

Gene Disruption/Knockout:

  • The target gene is replaced by a selectable marker (Note: homologous recombination).
  • Fungi are haploid so we get an immediate phenotype.
  • Loss of character of interest = successful disruption.
  • Disruption of PKS (first step of the pathway) = complete loss of tenellin- like products
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5
Q

How did they find out which gene did which step?

A
  • made a series of expression plasmids and built up the pathway one gene at a time in a different fungus (heterologous expression)
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6
Q

What did the Tenellin project show?

A
  • by swapping around the domains betwen tenellin and DMB (different methylations and different ketides) different compounds were produced.
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7
Q

Why is RNA harder to engineer than DNA?

A
  • Degrades easily
  • tissue-specific expression (can’t plate out)
  • can’t directly clone or sequence it (yet).
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8
Q

What is PepMV?

A

Pepino mosaic virus

  • jumped host from a South American shrub to European tomatoes, threatening commercial tomato production.
  • has 5 peptides: coat protein/ replicase/ TGBP1, 2 & 3
  • in the Potex (Potato virus X) family so can use Potex primers to sequence its genome and find out how it jumped host.
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9
Q

How were infectious clones used to determine why the South American strain of PepMV is more aggressive than the European one?

A
  • They mad various swaps and put them back together in yeast (great for overlapping fragments).
  • Changing the coat protein of the European strain to the Chilean one was enough to change its virulence.
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10
Q

Whats a problem with infectious clones and how is this overcome?

A

Some viral cDNA is unstable in E.coli.
- overcome by adding plant introns, however, you can’t do in vitro transcription anymore as the introns won’t be spliced out.

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11
Q

How can agroinfiltration be used to study plant disease?

A
  • agrobacterium with GFP tagged genes can be injected through stomata.
  • T-DNA migrates to the nucleus and is transcribed by the 35s promoter.
  • GFP tag can show how viruses are transmitted. we can then develop effective preventative methods.
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