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Summary Genetic Engineering

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A detailed summary of all the information you'll need for undergraduate Genetic Engineering.

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Genetic engineering: immunotechniques

Antibodies
 Antibodies are a fundamental tool in the analysis of proteins
 Raise antibodies to specific peptide specific
peptide sequences
 Purify specific antibody
 Antibodies can be polyclonal (population of
antibodies that recognise different regions
and have different affinities for your
protein) or monoclonal (a single antibody
species produced using a clonal cell line
called a hybridoma)
 You generate the variability of antibody
library by V and J variation
 Polyclonal have different variable exons
 Monoclonal is the same variable exon,
which means that all antibodies are the
same

Production of monoclonal antibodies
 Plasma cells produce immune reaction, they
produce lots of antibodies
Antibody labelling
 Need to be able to recognize antibodies
 Don’t labelled radioactively with iodine as this is
dangerous as can cause thyroid cancer still used to
label fat cells
 They are now measured indirectly using a
secondary antibody that recognises the constant
region of the primary antibody.
 Secondary antibody is usually linked to a
fluorophore as FITC (green), rhodamine (red) or
enzyme such as horse radish peroxidase, alkaline phosphatase
 Advantages of indirect labelling- amplify singal, very sensitive, can use the same antibody with
multiple primary antibodies
 Disadvantages- have to perform 2 rounds of detection protocol
Immune dot blots
 In this process protein extract is placed on the membrane and it is analysed using an antibody
Western blot
 Commonly used
 SDS-PAGE- polyacrylamide gel electrohphoresis
 Extract protein from cell/tissue
 Denature in SDS buffer- proteins are coated with negatively charged SDS, the larger the protein
the more SDS
 Electrophorese samples - seperates proteins based on size
 Transfer to nitrocellulose
 Incubate with specific antibody

, Visualise antibody- usually on secondary antibody linked to horse radish peroxidase
 You can detect the location of the antibody using enzyme assay
 Secondary antibodies are often conjugated ti HRP
 HRP catalyses the release of light upon reaction with luminol/H2O2
 This can show where the antibody is bound
Immunoprecipitation
 Protein G- cell wall protein isolated from type G streptococci
 Protein A- derived from staph A
 Protein A and G bind the constant region of immunoglobulin with high affinity
 Cause of this binding ability they can be used to facilitate purification and recovery of either
polyclonal or monoclonal immunoglobulins
 Protein A and G can be linked to agarose, maganetic beds or solid supports




Uses of immunoprecipitation

 Look at proteins expressed at low levels
 Post translational modifications
 Identify components of protein complexes
 To see if two proteins interact




Co-immunoprecipitation

, To identify proteins in complexes
 To determine how proteins interact




chromatin immunoprecipitation
 Determines the DNA sequences that are bound by specific proteins or modified histones
 Uses primers against a specific gene in the PCR reaction to determine if that region is bound by
the protein of interest
ChIP products can be analysed in a number of ways
 PCR- does the protein bind
 qPCR- quantifies the level of protein binding
 microarray- determines if the protein binds to a large number of different sequences and its
relative affinity
 ChIPSeq- determines all sequences bound by protein
Immunocytochemistry/immunohistochemistry
 Fix cells using formaldehyde- crosslinks proteins and preserves structure
 Permeablise cells using detergent- such as TritonX-100 or methanol/acetone, puts holes in
membrane wall allowing antibody into cell
 Visualise using secondary antibody with fluorescence or enzyme reaction- determines which
cells express the protein, where the protein is in the cell
Measuring rate of synthesis/degradation of protein
 Incubate cells with 35S Met for set time (pulse)
 Incubate cell with excess unlabelled Met (chase)
 Make protein extracts at several time points
 Immunoprecipitated with antibody
 Run on SDS-PAGE (electrophoresis)
 Quantify 35S label in protein
In vitro protein synthesis
 Uses wheat germ cells or reticulocytes
 Lyse cells (breakdown)
 Spin to remove nuclei, mitochondria and plastids
 Use or purify further

GST pull down assays: detect protein-protein interactions in

, PCR- quantitative aspects and biomedical applications




 30 cycles should be sufficient to be enough DNA
Acid denaturation
 Tm= melting temperature- at which 50% remain double strand and 50% are double strand
 Want to design primers with similar melting temperatures

Nucleic acid hybridisation

 High salt stabilises hybrids
 Low salt destabilises mismatched hybrids
 Formamide- disrupts H-bonds and so its presence lowers the Tm allowing hybridization
experiments at lower temps
Calculating Tm
 Simple rule- 2+4 = Tm=(2x A+T) + (4xG+C)
Amplification and hybridisation methods
 We can analyse RNA and DNA
 All PCR reactions are based of DNA
 Can analyse RNA by making a DNA copy using reverse transcriptase
 We can start with low amounts of starting material sensitive and quantitative systems
 Rapid and can analyse multiple samples
 Can analyse each sample with multiple primers
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