Sequencing a genome can be viewed as…
Obtaining the parts list of the cell/organism.
What 4 things are required for DNA synthesis?
DNA polymerase, primer, template DNA and dNTPs.
Describe DNA sequencing by the chain termination method (aka Sanger Sequencing)
Describe fluorescent-labelled ddNTPs and capillary electrophoresis
Fluorescent ddNTPs determine which ddNTP has been incorporated in sequencing reaction
- As the DNA fragments exit the capillary, they pass through a laser detection system. The laser excites the fluorescent dye attached to the ddNTP at the end of each fragment, causing it to emit light at a specific wavelength corresponding to one of the four bases (A, T, C, or G). The emitted light is detected and recorded as a peak in a chromatogram.
Why is capillary electrophoresis better for fluorescent-labelled ddNTPs
Sequencing reactions are run on capillary gel electrophoresis (better heat dissipation and resolution, less sample required, more parallel reactions run at a time)
What is automated base calling?
In automated base calling, what is Phred?
What are automated sequencers?
When doing Sanger sequencing, why is the reaction only limited to obtaining up to 800 bps of sequence per reaction?
The polymerase falls off (the polymerase has a certain sensitivity)
Describe the Human Genome Sequencing Project, specifically the public and private sectors involved in the project
In the Human Genome project, the DNA came from anonymous donors of diverse ethnic backgrounds. Why?
This system was better than a lottery system to sequence some random person’s DNA because it helped us determine how similar human genomes actually are (since the genome hadn’t been sequenced by that point). Found that humans have a pretty similar genome, with only some different alleles to account for our different phenotypes.
Describe the shotgun approach to sequencing
The shotgun approach requires breaking the genomes into smaller fragments or clones and sequencing these fragments
Random shearing/sonication in sequencing
Randomly breaking the fragments of the chromosome into random bits, and fragments are sequenced independently
You need many copies of the same fragment to perform Sanger sequencing and to accurately see fluorescence. What can be used (in general) to accomplish this?
Cloning vectors
What are the 5 common features of a vector?
Phagemid
1 kb insert
Plasmid
up to 10 kb insert
P1 clone
100 kb insert
Bacterial Artificial Chromosome
up to 300 kb insert
What are the steps of hierarchical shotgun sequencing (3 steps)
What is the goal when mapping the correct order of BAC clones?
Sequence the minimum number of nucleotides to cover the entire genome to cut costs (i.e. don’t want to sequence multiple BACs containing the same region of the genome)
What are two ways of detecting BACs with overlapping genome sequences?
Describe the steps for BAC library screening by hybridization
Describe restriction fingerprinting of BAC clones