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Stanford CS 262 - Lecture Notes

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CS262 Discussion Section 2Today’s agendaMolecular scissorsSlide 4Slide 5Viruses: Making a living by hijacking cellsSlide 7Slide 8Slide 9Restriction-modification systemsBiotechnologyBiotechnology: Produce synthetic HGHSlide 13PlasmidsSlide 15Slide 16Slide 17DefinitionsThe wider world of biotechnologyScotland, 1997How was Dolly cloned?CS262 Discussion Section 2Today’s agendaOverview of some more biology underlying DNA sequences.Problem Set difficultiesMolecular scissorsEnzymes, naturally occurring in bacteria, that cut DNA at very specific places.e.g, BamHI cuts recognition sequence GGATCC between GG.Another restriction enzyme will have a different recognition sequence and will make its cuts between different pairs of bases.Viruses: Making a living by hijacking cellsA virus is like a thief who arrives at a factory he intends to rob possessing only two things – the tools to get inside, and some software that will make the factory turn out items he can use.T4 bacteriophage is a virus that looks like an alien landing pod. With its six legs, the bacteriophage attaches to the surface of the much larger bacteria Escherichia coli (E. coli).Once attached, the bacteriophage injects DNA into the bacterium. The DNA instructs the bacterium to produce masses of new viruses. So many are produced, that the E. coli bursts.Now THAT's a NASTY virus!Restriction-modification systemsA modification methyl-transferase that recognizes a specific DNA sequence, and methylates particular bases in that sequence.A restriction endonuclease that recognizes the same sequence, and if the site is not methylated, cleaves the DNA.BiotechnologyThe use of living organisms to create products.Human Growth Hormone (HGH)Secreted by pituitary glandA faulty pituitary gland can leave people abnormally short.Previously, HGH was laboriously extracted from the pituitaries of a dead human.Unsafe and produces too little HGHBiotechnology: Produce synthetic HGHIsolate gene for HGH from human cells and snip it out.Insert into E.coli.E.coli will start transcribing and translating the gene. Grow the bacteria in millions.Result: Biotech firms manufacture HGH and ship to pharmacies worldwide.How do you cut DNA to get a human gene out of the human genome?Use restriction enzymes.How do you get this gene coding for protein inside a group of bacterial mini-factories?PlasmidsPlasmids are extrachromosomal rings of bacterial DNA that can be as little as 1000 bp in length.They can replicate independently of the bacterial chromosome, and they can move into bacterial cells.Bacteria are capable of taking up DNA from their surroundings, after which this DNA will code for proteins inside the bacterial cell. (Transformation)DefinitionsRecombinant DNA: Two or more segments of DNA that have been combined by humans into a sequence that does not exist in nature.Cloning: Making an exact genetic copy. A clone is one of the exact genetic copies.Cloning vector: Self-replicating agents that serve as vehicles to transfer and replicate genetic material.The wider world of biotechnologyCloning can involve not just genes but whole organisms.Humans have actually been making clones for centuries, eg, ‘cuttings’ taken from plants.Biotechnology has expanded the range of what can be cloned.Scotland, 1997Dolly, the sheep, cloned by Ian Wilmut and colleagues.Reproductive cloning: Cloning intended to produce genetically identical animals.How was Dolly cloned?Dolly is an exact genetic replica of another


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Stanford CS 262 - Lecture Notes

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