Gel Electrophoresis
PCR
CRISPR
ELISA
Western/Northern Blot
100

What does it do?

Separates DNA by size

  • Shorter DNA travels further through gel and utilizes Agarose

100

What is the use and steps?

Use: Make MANY copies of a region of DNA to study

Steps: 

  • Denaturation

  • Annealing

  • Extension

100

What are the cons of CRISPR?

  • Ethics (how far is too far?)

    • Potentially wiping out species, creating bacterial resistance

  • Mutations at the cut site or other places in the genome

100

Why should we dilute samples? 

We can protect against false positives and also show disease progression

100

Describe the northern blot?

Very similar process to the Western Blot, but this test looks for RNA, not protein

200

What are the uses?

  • Crime scenes

  • Paternal/Maternal testing

  • Comparing species

  • Identifying/observing certain diseases

200

Why do we use PCR? 

PCR is used because it lets us take a small section of DNA and make hundreds of copies. This small section can be amplified and examined through many processes.

200

What are the pros of CRISPR?

Scientists can accelerate research, there can be rapid diagnostic and they can correct mutations.

200
How do we interrupt the results? 

Look for color change; AMOUNT of color change can be used to signify the rate of disease progression. (More marker detected = More color change)

200

Why the membrane? 

The gel is too fragile for next steps!

  • Antibodies could become stuck in the gel and give false results

  • Once proteins have moved onto the membrane, we add antibodies to locate the proteins we want to see

    • The antibodies act like a flag on the target protein

300

When separating DNA, does it have the same charge? Where will it move? 

Yes! Same charge. The DNA will move from negative to positive ends. 

300

What is PCR 20x-30x? 

When these 3 steps are repeated many, many times! DNA made from a previous cycle is used as a template. This ensures that the desired DNA is the only thing getting replicated.

300

What does CRISPR stand for?

Clustered Regularly Interspaced Short Palindromic Repeats

300

What does ELISA stand for? What does it do? Uses?

Stands for: Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay

Does: Measures antibodies, antigens, proteins, and glycoproteins in a biological sample

Uses: Diagnosis, pregnancy tests, test for contamination, allergens, disease progression

300

What is a reporter enzyme? 

  • The reporter enzyme allows us to locate the proteins!

  • By adding the antibodies, we only see the proteins we’re looking for on the final membrane

400

How does it work?

  • Each line on the gel is a band of DNA. 

  • DNA samples that have similar banding patterns will be more closely related

400

Describe step 1

Denaturation:

Heat the strands of DNA to break (denature) them apart into two separate strands and give room to replicate the desired gene.

400

What does Cas 9 do?

  • Cas9 will cut the DNA, shutting the targeted gene off

Research suggests CRISPR-Cas9 can be used to target and modify “typos” (aka mutations) in the human genome

400

Describe:

Step 1: Antibody coating 

Step 2: Protein capture

Step 1: The specific capture antibody is immobilized on high protein-binding plates.

Step 2: Samples and standard dilutions are added to wells and will be captured by bound antibodies

400

What is a western blot? 

It’s a form of gel electrophoresis to detect specific proteins.

  • Detect protein of interest

  • Size of proteins

  • Amount of protein expressed

500

Are banding patterns similar if organisms are related?

Yes! Closely related organisms have similar DNA, therefore their banding patterns will also be similar.

500

Describe steps 2 & 3

Step 2: Primer annealing

Step 3: Primer Extension

Step 2: Primer annealing: 

Cools DNA so primers can bind. Primers bind to areas of the DNA that we want to amplify. And two primers are needed for each side of DNA. 

Step 3: Primer extension: 

Heat up DNA again to use Taq Polymerase and Taq Polymerase adds nucleotides to extend the primers and replicate DNA. This enzyme is adapted to work in high temps!


500

What does Cas9 bind to? Describe it.

Cas9 will bind to the DNA using a "spacer." A spacer is a short RNA sequence that guides the CRISPR system to the target DNA.

500

Describe:

Step 3: Detection antibody

Step 4: Detection conjugate

Step 5: Substrate added

Step 3: Specific detection antibody is added to enable detection of captured protein. (If protein is absent, this antibody will attach to nothing.)

Step 4: Binds to detection antibody (like a signal)

Step 5: Changes color to analyze results

500

How does the western blot work? 

Proteins in the sample are coated with a detergent to denature (unfold) them AND give them a negative charge. (We need linear proteins to move through the gel.) 

  • Perform gel electrophoresis. (Once complete, move proteins onto a membrane)
    Take completed gel & membrane and sandwich between filter paper

    • Negatively charged proteins will be drawn to the positive end

    • The membrane is between the positive end of the chamber and the gel, so the proteins will be drawn onto the membrane


    • Once the membrane copies the gel, it’s moved to a chamber and exposed to primary antibodies

    • This primary antibody specifically attaches to the protein we’re looking for

    • Once attached, the membrane is washed so extra antibodies don’t stick around

    • A secondary antibody is then added to the membrane

    • This secondary antibody attaches to the primary antibody, not the protein

    • Contains a reporter enzyme that will produce light or color