What is forward genetics vs backward genetics?
Forward genetics → Starting from the phenotype (weird) and looking for what changes occurred in the genotype
Reversed genetics → Starting from changes in the genotype and seeing how it affects the phenotype
What are 2 important characteristics of model organisms?
What are the main 5 eukaryotic model organisms?
From 1 → 5: Get more like humans, but get more difficult to grow/work with
*Diverged from human more and more recently in history/development
What are the characteristics of S. cerevisiae?
(generation time, advantages, disadvantages)
What is measured when we talk about the generation time?
It is the time between when the embryo is conceived to when the offspring is capable of reproducing itself (mature enough), of conceiving an embryo
What does the life cycle/reproduction cycle of S. cerevisiae look like?
What are the advatanges of yeasts in their haploid form vs in their diploid form?
Haploid form → easy to study gene effect (direct)
Diploid form → study gene interaction, patterns of dominance, trans-acting, etc.
What are the characteristics of C.elegans?
(generation time, advantages, disadvantages)
2 sexes: male (XO) & hermaphrodite (XX):
- Hermaphrodite can self-fertilize → make mostly hermaphrodites
- Can also mate with males → different combinations of genes
What does the life cycle of C. elegans look like?
Normal cycle:
L1 → 12h + 8h + 8h → L4 → 18h → Reproductive adult (can lay eggs) → embryo → 14h → L1
Dauer stage → if exposed to a tough envrionment → hibernation → can later develop and lay eggs when get out of Dauer stage
take ~ 13h from L1 → Dauer (can then stay several months) → L4 (out of Dauer)
What are the characteristics of D. melanogaster?
(generation time, advantages, disadvantages)
What are the characteristics of Danio rerio?
(generation time, advantages, disadvantages)
Danio rerio = zebrafish
What are the characteristics of Mus musculus?
(generation time, advantages, disadvantages)
What is special about Axolotl mexicanum as an emerging model organism?
In can regenerate its limbs
What is special about Planaria as a model organism?
It can regenerate its whole body from any cut part (full of stem cells)
What are the 3 main steps of a forward genetic screen?
How was cell cycle of S.cerevisiae explored using a forward genetic screen?
Why is S. cerevisiae used to study cell cycle?
We can visualize different stages of the cell cycle easily:
G1 phase → tiny bud
S phase → DNA being replicated and pushed into the bud
G2/M phase → bud separation → 2 cells
What is the mechanisms and the importance of temperature sensitive mutants?
Problem: The cell division cycle mutants of interest couldn’t be cultured and replicated because they couldn’t go through the cell cycle
Solution: Temperature sensitive mutants → At low permissive temperatures, the yeast can replicate/divide
At high restrictive temperatures, the mutant phenotype can be observed (blocked at a specific stage of the cell cycle) → can go back to dividing when brought back to lower temperatures
*So mutants can be expanded and studied
What is replica plating used for?
Used to isolate temperature sensitive mutants
What process is affected in cdc1 mutant yeasts?
Cells have a small bud, but won’t start replication, bud stays very small (stops in G1)
Functional gene product: Putative metallophosphodieasterase → involved making cell wall (not helpful for humans)
What process is affected in cdc2 mutant yeasts?
Mutants can form a bud, can see the start of DNA replication, but doesn’t complete it, stops in S phase
Functional gene product: DNA polymerase delta catalytic subunit
What process is affected in cdc3 mutant yeasts?
Cdc3 mutants stop in late stages of mitosis, division of the buds can happen to a certain extent, but the cells can’t separate 100%
Functional gene product: Septin family member, involved in cytokinesis
How did researchers confirm that 2 yeasts with the same phenotype had a mutation in the same gene?
By complementation test:
If mating the 2 haploid yeasts together → diploid mutant → same gene
If matin the 2 haploid yeasts together → diploid WT → different genes bc the WT copy of each gene complemented
*2nd stage of the forward screen
How did researchers proceed to identify which was the mutant gene in the yeast after having identified the different cell cycle mutants? (cdc)
*Final stage of a forward genetic screen
Try to rescue the mutant with different DNA plasmids: