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DNA and RNA Analysis Techniques

DNA and RNA Analysis Techniques

DNA and RNA Analysis Techniques

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Nucleic Acid Extraction & QC - Getting the Goods

  • Goal: Isolate pure, intact DNA/RNA.
  • Core Steps: Lysis → Separation → Precipitation → Wash → Elute.

Genomic DNA Extraction and Purification Protocol

  • Lysis: Mechanical (homogenization) or Chemical (detergents, Proteinase K).
  • Separation: Organic (Phenol-Chloroform) or Solid-phase (silica columns).
  • Quality Control (QC):
    • Quantity: Spectrophotometry (OD at 260 nm).
      • DNA: $1 \text{ OD} = 50 \text{ µg/mL}$
      • RNA: $1 \text{ OD} = 40 \text{ µg/mL}$
    • Purity: A260/A280 (protein), A260/A230 (organics).
    • Integrity: Gel electrophoresis (DNA: high MW band; RNA: 28S/18S rRNA, RIN).

⭐ A260/A280 ratio for pure DNA is ~1.8, for pure RNA is ~2.0. <1.7 suggests protein. A260/A230 ideally 2.0-2.2.

PCR Techniques - Copy Cat Genetics

  • Principle: Exponential in-vitro amplification of specific DNA.
  • Key Reagents:
    • Template DNA
    • Primers (Forward & Reverse)
    • Taq Polymerase (heat-stable)
    • dNTPs (deoxynucleotide triphosphates)
    • Buffer with Mg²⁺
  • Thermal Cycling Steps: šŸ“Œ "Dad Ate Apples" (Denaturation, Annealing, Extension)
    • Denaturation: ~95°C (dsDNA → ssDNA).
    • Annealing: ~50-65°C (Primers bind to template).
    • Extension: ~72°C (Taq polymerase synthesizes new DNA).
  • Outcome: $2^n$ fold amplification of target DNA (where n = number of cycles).

PCR Thermal Cycling Stages Diagram

⭐ Taq polymerase, isolated from the bacterium Thermus aquaticus, is a heat-stable enzyme crucial for PCR due to its ability to withstand repeated high-temperature denaturation steps.

Hybridization Techniques - Finding Your Match

  • Core Principle: Labeled nucleic acid probe binds to complementary target sequence.
  • šŸ“Œ SNoW DRoP Mnemonic:
    • Southern = DNA
    • Northern = RNA
    • Western = Protein (Note: Western blot uses antibodies, not nucleic acid probes, but often taught together).
TechniqueTargetProbePurposeKey Application(s)
Southern BlotDNADNA/RNADetect specific DNA sequences (e.g., gene)Gene structure, RFLPs, mutations (e.g., sickle cell)
Northern BlotRNADNA/RNADetect specific RNA (gene expression)mRNA levels, transcript size, splicing variants
FISHDNA/RNA (in situ)DNA/RNA (labeled)Visualize & map genetic material in cellsGene mapping, aneuploidy, translocations (e.g., t(9;22))
MicroarrayDNA/cDNA/RNAOligonucleotidesHigh-throughput analysis of many sequencesGene expression profiling, SNP genotyping, CGH

⭐ FISH can detect chromosomal abnormalities like translocations (e.g., BCR-ABL in CML) and aneuploidies directly on slides, even in interphase nuclei.

  • Dot/Slot Blot: Simpler; detects presence/absence of sequence, no size info.
  • ASO Probes: Allele-Specific Oligonucleotides for single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) detection (e.g., Cystic Fibrosis).

Sequencing & Typing - Reading Blueprints

⭐ Sanger sequencing uses dideoxynucleotides (ddNTPs) to terminate DNA synthesis, allowing for sequence determination.

  • Sanger Sequencing (Chain Termination):
    • Principle: Incorporates chain-terminating ddNTPs during in-vitro DNA replication. Fragments are size-separated.
    • Uses: Gold standard for targeted sequencing, validating single gene mutations, sequencing PCR products.
  • Next-Generation Sequencing (NGS):
    • Principle: Massively parallel sequencing of millions of DNA fragments simultaneously. High throughput.
    • Uses: Whole Exome/Genome Sequencing (WES/WGS), RNA-Seq, cancer genomics, identifying novel/rare variants.
  • DNA Typing Methods:
    • RFLP (Restriction Fragment Length Polymorphism): Detects variations in DNA fragment lengths after restriction enzyme digestion. Used for genetic mapping.
    • VNTR/STR (Variable Number Tandem Repeats/Short Tandem Repeats): Analyzes length variations in tandemly repeated DNA sequences. Key for DNA fingerprinting, forensics.

Sanger sequencing dideoxynucleotide chain termination

High‑Yield Points - ⚔ Biggest Takeaways

  • PCR amplifies DNA; RT-PCR for RNA (via cDNA).
  • Sanger sequencing for nucleotide sequence; NGS for high-throughput analysis.
  • FISH localizes DNA sequences on chromosomes; CISH uses bright-field.
  • Southern blotting detects DNA fragments; Northern blotting for RNA.
  • Microarrays analyze gene expression of many genes simultaneously.
  • RFLP identifies DNA variations via restriction enzyme cleavage.
  • AS-PCR detects single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs).

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