Anda di halaman 1dari 6

Destination: AWESOME!

Howdy ho budding Biochemologists! Congratulations! Youre about to embark on a super saver one-way journey on board the HMS Wonder to the fabulous land of Awesome. En route to the destination, should the conditions permit, we will try to take in the island of Wow and the sacred mountain range of Crikey! To add jeopardy to the excitement, you have all been entered into a special prize draw where the winner will be randomly (seemingly) selected and awarded varying degrees of disaster and disappointment. Some or all of you may not make it to the Promised Land; to those of you who dont, please try to take as a personally as you can, when science doesnt work its because the Gods dislike your character. Those of you who reach those distant shores will not have travelled in vain, this isnt like a god-awful trip to Belgium in the rain that you really didnt think through or something, its actually pretty cool. Bon Voyage!

NLCS Jeju

Page 1 of 6

PB

Overview of the process:


1. 2. 3. 4. 5. DNA extraction DNA purification DNA precipitation PCR Gel electrophoresis to detect PCR products

Equipment Micro centrifuge tube and PCR tube (well be mostly using the PCR one, mostly). Fixed volume micropipettes, the one well be using is set to 40ul.

Figure 1 Micropipette

Figure 2 Microfuge tube, left, and PCR tube

TE buffer - this stops biological agents from breaking down DNA, which is otherwise extremely chemically stable, which is why its used by life to store genes1. If buffers were people, this one would be George Cloony, its the most famous and is pretty much in anything with DNA in it. Lysis buffer- 1:2 Washing up liquid2:TE buffer and a pinch of proteinase K. The helps to break down lipid components to the membranes that separate you from victory (cell membrane and nuclear envelope), the proteinase also helps with this by nonspeficically hydrolysing the membrane proteins, but also seperates the DNA from the nucleosomes and, most importantly, breaks down any DNAses floating about in the mix. Lysis buffer version 2: AB LYSIS BUFFER (500ml) 50ml 1M Tris (pH 8.0) 10ml 5M NaCl 50ml 0.5M EDTA (pH 8.0) 100ml 10% SDS
1

The T is Tris-Cl is a pH buffer set to pH8, to help reduce the activity of DNAses, proteins which break down DNA and are everywhere thanks to various different immune systems which use them to attack viruses which are basically just bits of DNA The E is EDTA, a chelating agent that effectively removes all metal ions in solution, which again the DNAses need in their active sites to cleave the covalent bonds in otherwise stable phosphodiester backbone during hydrolysis. 2 Contains SDS, sodium dodecyl sulphate, the old skool name of which is sodium lauryl sulfate , is in pretty much all synthetic soaps and detergents these days, even toothpaste.

NLCS Jeju

Page 2 of 6

PB

290ml ddH2O 3 Phenol oily, organic layer that removes proteins (and lipids) which get all up in your business like some kind of jive talking turkey in downstream applications, including the protease which would break down any enzymes like the Taq polymerase essential for PCR Chloroform, another, less harsh, organic solvent removes the phenol Ethanol removes the chloroform Sodium Acetate High salt solution helps the DNA precipitate out of the ethanol PCR Beads Contain the Taq DNA polymerase which does the copying of the DNA, MgCl2 needed for Taq and the dNTPs, the building blocks used to extend the DNA Gel loading buffer makes the final PCR solution sink into the well of the gel for electrophoresis. Agarose gel a polysaccharide derived from seaweed used at about 2% agarose, TAE buffer and a dash of 20,000x indicator solution (RedSafe) TAE buffer Contains TE and a spot of sodium acetate to increase the ion concentration to increase the conductivity of the electrolyte used in the electrophoresis.

Step 1: Extracting the DNA


This step gathers the plant material and then releases the DNA from the cells

Figure 3 DNA Density in a plant seed4

Lougheed Genetics Laboratory Manual 2005


http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0956713506002295 Page 3 of 6

NLCS Jeju

PB

Figure 4 Anatomy of a Peanut5 1. The highest DNA density in a peanut seed is the embryo, crack open a fresh one and pop out the embryo, get either the leaves or the embryonic root and remember which one youve got. Try to crush it with a spatula on a piece of paper. 2. Now place it in a PCR tube until its about a third full of peanut extract and add 500ul of lysis buffer, and with the plastic tip try to mix it with the buffer as well as possible. 3. Place it in the 60 oC water bath for 30 minutes. 4. Break time!

Step 2: Phenol/Chloroform purification


This step removes proteins and lipids 1. Transfer the plant sample to a PCR tube and add 500ul of phenol 2. Mix the contents of the tube until an emulsion forms. 3. Centrifuge the mixture for 1 minute at room temperature. If the organic and aqueous phases are not well separated, centrifuge again for a longer time. 4. Use a micropipette to transfer the aqueous phase (top layer) to a fresh PCR tube, but keep all of your old tubes in case things go-pear shaped. 5. Now add 500ul of phenol again to the aqueous phase, mix, centrifuge it again. 6. Transfer the top layer to a new PCR tube and add 500ul of chloroform this time, mix, then centrifuge it again. 7. Remove the aqueous top layer to a new PCR tube, add 500ul of chloroform a second and final time, mix, then centrifuge it again. 8. Finally remove the aqueous (top) phase again to a new PCR tube 9. Add 200ul of ethanol to the solution and put it in a -20oC freezer for 30 mins. 10. Break Time!

http://www.boiled-peanut-world.com/peanut.html Page 4 of 6

NLCS Jeju

PB

Step 3 DNA precipitation and resuspension into TE buffer This step makes the DNA insoluble in ethanol, spins the salt into a pellet and allows you to remove all traces of organic solvents 1. 2. 3. 4. Spin the cold PCR at full speed for 20 minutes Carefully pour off as much of the ethanol as you can. Place in a drying cupboard for 30 minutes Break Time!

NLCS Jeju

Page 5 of 6

PB

Step 4 PCR (Polymerase Chain Reaction)


This step uses your extracted and purified DNA and makes, hopefull, hundreds of millions of copies of a gene specific to peanuts (the Ara h2 gene6) 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. Resuspend the DNA pellet in 100ul of TE buffer Take 8ul of your DNA solution and add it to a tube containing a PCR bead. Add 8ul of primer 1 Add 8ul of primer 2 Place in the thermocycler Finish

Step 5 Agarose gel electrophoresis


This step separates out any DNA that you have and allows you to then visualise your success! 1. Pour a 3% agarose gel, remember the 20x TAE and the RedSafe DNA stain (has a special fluorescence spectra under UV light when bound to DNA) 2. Place the gel in 1 litre of TAE buffer so that the buffer covers completely the agarose gel 3. Add 8ul of loading buffer to your PCR sample 4. Add 20ul of this solution to a well, run at 120V for 25mins. 5. Visualise using hand-held UV lamp (or a Transluminator) looking for fluorescent bands.

Figure 5 See, it does work sometimes! Check out the barely visible band, this is what it should look like, but much brighter.

Identification and characterization of a hypoallergenic ortholog of Ara h 2.01. Ramos et al. Plant Mol Biol. 2009 Feb;69(3):325-35

NLCS Jeju

Page 6 of 6

PB

Anda mungkin juga menyukai