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Sequence for Yourself
Part II: Cloning
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Mix Human Fragments to Vectors
To clone DNA, we isolate the fragments from one another,
then make many copies, or clones, of each one of the
fragments. This work is most often done in bacterial host
cells.
We have mixed our DNA fragments with cloning vectors. (A
vector is a short piece of DNA that is capable of
replicating on its own when inside a cell.) Vectors are
usually circular, but these have been cut open by a
restriction enzyme.
Fragments and Vectors Combine
With the help of a DNA ligase, which is an enzyme that helps
to connect pieces of DNA, the human DNA fragments and the
DNA of the vectors combine.
The vectors have become circular again.
Vectors Shocked Into Bacteria
Next, we bring together the vectors and bacteria cells and
expose the mixture to a brief electrical shock. The shock
forces some of the vectors into the cells of the
bacteria.
If a cell takes in more than one vector (they almost never
do), that cell will not go on to replicate.
Let Cells Multiply
The cells are spread out thinly on a growth medium and
allowed to multiply. The cells are far enough away from one
another to establish their own distinct colonies.
As the cells multiply and duplicate their own chromosomes,
they duplicate the vectors as well. Each bacterial daughter
cell ends up with a copy of the vector, which includes the
human DNA fragment. Each colony on the plate will contain
copies of a different piece of cloned DNA.
Pick a Colony
When a colony has grown to about the size of a period in a
book, it will contain a million cells. At this point we
place the colony in a liquid culture, where it multiplies
further.
Soon there are billions of copies of the original cell. Each
cell contains a copy of the vector and within that vector
the original human DNA fragment.
Recover Cloned DNA
We then expose all of the cells to a detergent, which
ruptures the cells' walls, and to sodium hydroxide, which
causes the bacteria's chromosomes to deteriorate and fall
away from the vectors.
The circular vectors are affected by this treatment, too,
but they quickly recover.
Repeat
So we now have billions of copies of human DNA (still
attached to the vector), all derived from a single DNA
fragment.
Each copy of this human DNA is 150,000 base pairs long,
which is still too long for determining the sequence of its
code. To get a batch of smaller fragments, we repeat the
entire process just described. We end up with billions of
copies of a fragment 2,000 to 4,000 base pairs long.
Continue: Part III: Preparing DNA for Detection
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Our Genetic Future (A Survey)
Manipulating Genes: How Much is Too Much?
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Understanding Heredity
Explore a Stretch of Code
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Nature vs Nurture Revisited
Sequence for Yourself
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Journey into DNA |
Meet the Decoders
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