HISTORY & BASICS
HOW IT WORKS
GEL ELECTROPHORESIS
BENEFITS
RISKS & CONTROVERSIES
100

Who discovered the Sanger sequencing method?

Frederick Sanger

100

Which enzyme builds the new DNA strand in Sanger sequencing?

DNA polymerase.

100

Do shorter DNA fragments travel farther or less in the gel?

Farther

100

What is the accuracy rate of Sanger sequencing?

About 99.99%

100

What major privacy concern comes from DNA sequencing?

Personal genetic data could be misused or shared without consent

200

What is another name for the Sanger method?

Chain termination method

200

What nucleotide type stops the DNA chain during sequencing?

Dideoxynucleotides (ddNTPs)

200

What does each band in the gel represent?

A DNA fragment ending at a specific base

200

Why is Sanger better for small sequencing tasks?

It is faster and cheaper for short DNA regions

200

Name one harmful substance used in Sanger lab work

Toxic dyes, mutagenic chemicals, or reagents

300

In what year was the Sanger method discovered?

1977

300

Why do ddNTPs stop DNA strand growth?

They lack a 3’ OH group needed for bonding.

300

Where is the first base located when reading the gel?

At the bottom (shortest fragment)

300

Name one medical use of Sanger sequencing

Detecting disease-causing mutations

300

What environmental issue does sequencing contribute to?

Plastic and chemical waste from gels and tubes.

400

What does Sanger sequencing determine in DNA?

The exact order of bases (A, T, C, G)

400

How many tubes are used in the classic Sanger setup?

Four tubes (one for A, T, C, G)

400

How are different bases distinguished in modern Sanger sequencing?

By fluorescent dye colors

400

Why is Sanger sequencing important in research

It verifies plasmids, gene edits, and mutations with high reliability

400

What type of error could affect medical decisions?

Incorrect or contaminated sequencing results

500

Why is Sanger sequencing still used today?

It’s highly accurate and ideal for small-scale DNA sequencing.

500

What is the purpose of the primer?

It provides a starting point for DNA polymerase.

500

Why are there four lanes in the gel?

Each lane corresponds to fragments ending with A, T, C, or G

500

What type of output does Sanger sequencing produce that is easy to read?

Chromatograms with color peaks

500

What legal debate exists around DNA sequencing?

Who owns the DNA sample and the genetic information (Ex. Police In Canada)