Title: Isolation of Genomic DNA from Arabidopsis thaliana
1Isolation of Genomic DNA from Arabidopsis thaliana
2Broad and Long Term Objective
To determine the copy number of Myb transcription
factor genes in the genome of the model plant
Arabidopsis thaliana
3Research Plan
Isolate Genomic DNA
Digest Genomic DNA with Various Restriction
Enzymes
Agarose Gel Electrophoresis and Southern Transfer
Southern Blot
Make Non-Radioactive Myb Probe
Hyribidize Probe to Southern Blot
Washes and Colorimetric Detection
Data Analysis
4Todays Laboratory Objectives
- To isolate high quality genomic
- DNA from Arabidopsis thaliana
- To determine the quantity and
- purity of the isolated DNA
5Arabidopsis thaliana
- Small flowering plant- mouse eared cress
(Brassicaceae) - The primary model organism in
- plant biology (small stature, 45 day generation
time, high seed yield, simple genome, easy to
transform) - Genome sequenced (125 Mb)
- Many established genetic resources mutant lines,
microarrays, EST databases - Widespread distribution in nature
6What do we need to do to isolate genomic DNA?
- Lyse cells
- Tissue disruption (mortar/pestle)
- Membrane solubulization (N-lauryl sarcosine)
- Inactivate nucleases
- Liquid N2
- EDTA (chelator)
- Separate DNA from other cellular macromolecules
- CTAB binds to and precipitates carbohydrates at
NaCl concentrations gt0.5 M - Phenolchloroform denatures and precipitates
proteins - Lipids remain in organic (phenolchloroform)
phase - RNAseA treatment
- Concentrate nucleic acids (remove carbohydrates)
- Alcohol/cation precipitation
7New Techniques/Theoretical Basis
- Plant tissue disruption by mortar and pestle
- Liquid N2 -196º C inhibits enzymatic (nuclease)
- activity
- Physical crushing of plant tissue cells broken
- The finer the grind, the better the DNA yield
8New Techniques/Theoretical Basis
- PhenolChloroform extraction
- PhenolChloroform (11)- organic solvents that
denature proteins - Insoluble in water- will phase partition in
aqueous solutions - (specific gravity 1.27)
- At pH 7.8-8.0, lipids partition in organic
phase, nucleic acids partition - in aqueous phase, precipitated proteins and
carbohydrates are at - the interface
- Phenol is toxic and highly corrosive!
9New Techniques/Theoretical Basis
Cesium Chloride Gradient
- Used to obtain highly pure DNA
- DNA in gradient subjected to centrifugal force of
105,000 xg - DNA forms band in gradient at its buoyant density
10Spectrophotometric determination of DNA
concentration/purity
- Nucleic acids absorb light at 260 nm
- Proteins absorb light at 280 nm
- Purity of Nucleic Acid indicated by A260/A280
- Pure DNA A260/A280 1.6-1.8
11Next Week
- Assess the integrity of the isolated DNA by
agarose gel electrophoresis - Digest the genomic DNA with
- restriction enzymes
12Restriction Enzymes
- becterial proteins that restrict host range for
certain bacteriophages - by cleaving specific DNA sequences
- bacterial immune system" destroy any
"non-self" DNA - Self DNA protected by host proteins that
methylate the specific DNA
sequences recognized by the restriction enzyme
(restriction/modification systems)
13Type II Restriction Enzymes
- Hundreds of restriction enzymes have been
identified. - Most recognize and cut palindromic sequences
- Many leave staggered (sticky) ends
- Important for molecular biologists because
restriction enzymes create unpaired "sticky ends"
which anneal with any complementary sequence -
14Using Restriction Enzymes
- The activity of restriction enzymes is dependent
upon precise environmental conditions - pH
- Temperature
- Salt Concentration
- Ions
- One enzymatic unit (U) is defined as the amount
of enzyme required to completely digest 1 ug of
DNA in 1 hr at 37º C - 3-5 U/ug of genomic DNA
- 1 U/ug of plasmid DNA
- Stocks typically at 10 U/ul
15Next Week
- Agarose gel elctrophoresis of
- digested DNA
- Capillary transfer of DNA from the
- gel to a nylon membrane