CS19996 Genotyping Arabidopsis
CS19996 Genotyping Arabidopsis
CS19996 Genotyping Arabidopsis
LAB 1
MOLECULAR GENOTYPING OF Arabidopsis
STUDENT GUIDE
Information from two NSF sponsored workshops was used in writing this lab: Greenomes: Plant Molecular Genetics and Genomics,
taught at the University of Texas Austin, July 2004 by the Dolan DNA Learning Center staff from Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory;
and Genomics: from Mendel to Microchips, taught by the Partnership for Plant Genomics Education at the University of California
Davis, July 2005.
GOAL
The goal of this laboratory is to introduce students to the action of transposons, to simple
plant DNA extraction and to the use of polymerase chain reaction (PCR) to compare
diploid genotypes.
OBJECTIVES
After completion, the student should be able to:
1. Isolate plant DNA and perform PCR using that DNA.
2. Explain the molecular process of PCR and the necessary reagents.
3. Interpret the results of the PCR reaction, given information about the Arabidopsis clf-
2 mutation.
4. Explain how a transposon functions.
5. Answer questions regarding diploid genotype when given PCR results.
6. Describe several applications of PCR.
7. Cast an agarose gel for chromosomal DNA verification.
8. Explain how agarose gel electrophoresis separates DNA fragments.
9. Construct a standard curve from gel electrophoresis results and use it to determine the
size of sample DNA fragments.
TENTATIVE TIMELINE
Day 1: Plant Arabidopsis seeds and prepare solutions
Day 2: DNA extraction and PCR
Day 3: Gel electrophoresis and analysis
BACKGROUND
Additional background reading can be found at: http://www.greenomes.org/ “Detecting a
Transposon Tag in Arabidopsis”.
Transposable Elements
Movement of transposons causes the multicolored kernel phenotypes in Indian corn and
many other phenotypes in other organisms. Transposons are fragments of DNA that do
not exist independently because they cannot be replicated, having no origin of replication
site (ORI) where DNA polymerase binds. They range in size from 750 bp to 1,500 bp and
can be found in bacteria, plants and animals. Transposons are spliced out of DNA sites
and transferred to others by an enzyme encoded by the transposon. This enzyme, called
transposase, recognizes inverted repeats on the ends of the transposon and cuts both
strands of the DNA forming blunt ends. The transposase enzyme also recognizes a 5-9 bp
target sequence within the genome, and cuts it asymmetrically leaving sticky ends. The
transposase holds the transposon in place at the new site while DNA polymerase adds
complementary nucleotides to the single stranded ends. Then ligase enzyme seals the
nicks to form direct repeats in the sequence on either side of the newly inserted
transposon (Figure 1).
The transposon
Ligation occurred here
Ligation occurred here
Figure 1. Transposon insertion (from Biology Fifth Edition by Campbell, Reece and Mitchell,
page 336, 1999, Benjamin Cummings, publishers)
These “jumping genes” were first discovered by Barbara McClintock who was doing
research on the variegation of Indian corn while working at Cold Spring Harbor
Laboratory, New York, in the 1940’s. McClintock named the transposable DNA element
she discovered “Dissociator” (Ds) after the way it disassociates from the chromosome on
which it is carried. When it then inserts into a gene that codes for a pigment, such as
anthocyanin, the pigment is not produced and the corn kernel is white instead of purple.
If the Ds element is transposed from the anthocyanin gene after the kernel starts
developing, some cells within the kernel produce pigment while others do not, resulting
in a mottled effect where purple spots appear within the white background (Figure 2).
The Ds element is not the entire story, however. McClintock found that another gene she
called “Activator” (Ac) is necessary for the transposition of Ds. Ds is believed to be a
mutant transposon, lacking the gene for transposase. Ac carries the transposase gene, and
no matter where in the genome it is located, it supplies the enzyme for the transposition
of Ds. It is possible to cross breed Indian corn so that the Ac gene is removed from the
genome. If Ac is missing, Ds will not move, giving a stable phenotype. Barbara
McClintock’s publication in 1953 documenting this non-classical genetics answer to
phenotypic traits rattled the scientific world that thought of genes as static structures. It
was not until the advent of modern biotechnology and DNA manipulation techniques that
McClintock was proven right. She was awarded the Nobel Prize in 1983 for her work.
mutated curly leaf (genotype clf/clf), the leaves are curled instead of straight, the plant
flowers early, has fused sepals, small petals, and grows slowly compared to wild type.
The mutation causes a decrease in both the extent of cell elongation and in the number of
cells, making the leaf appear curly (Figure 3).
A. B. C.
CLF is a homeotic gene that encodes a histone methyltransferase enzyme (Narita et. al,
2004). Homeotic genes are active in early embryonic development of an organism,
controlling body plans and the development of groups of cells (Campbell, Reese and
Mitchell; 1999). The defects observed in CLF mutants arise because histone
methyltransferase fails to repress AGAMOUS, a gene controlling cell division and
elongation during flower development. When AGAMOUS is expressed prematurely, it
affects vegetative development and leaf morphogenesis, causing leaves to curl (Kim,
Tsukaya, and Uchimiya; 1998).
3’
Helicases (unwind the DNA) DNA Polymerase adds new nucleotides 5’ to 3’
5’
Figure 4. The enzymes of DNA Replication. Synthesis always occurs in the 5’ to 3’ direction.
Therefore, the lagging strand must be synthesized in short pieces called Okazaki Fragments,
which are later ligated together. The Leading strand is synthesized in a continuous fashion, 5’
to 3’. (Modified from Biology Fifth Edition by Campbell, Reece and Mitchell, page 336, 1999, Benjamin Cummings, publishers)
The primer is required because the replication enzyme, DNA polymerase, must have a
free 3’ hydroxyl group (-OH) in order to fit onto the DNA strand and then to add the next
nucleotide. See Figure 5. Single nucleotides are then added opposite their
complementary nucleotides to build two complete DNA molecules, each with one old
strand and one new strand.
Figure 5. DNA Replication. Shows how new nucleotides are joined to a primer.
(Modified from Biology Fifth Edition by Campbell, Reece and Mitchell, page 336, 1999, Benjamin Cummings, publishers)
amplified. The ideal concentration is between 0.1 and 0.5 M. Primers are sold as solid
DNA by some companies and diluted in water by other companies. A certificate of
analysis packed with the primers give the mass, number of moles and if diluted, the
concentration in either μM or μg/μl or both. It can be difficult to determine how to dilute
and mix the primers for use in PCR so that the concentration is between the optimum 0.1
and 0.5 μM. Table 1 and the sample calculation, below, may help.
Suppose a primer concentration is given as 40 μM and 0.32 μg/μl. You need to make
up 300 μl of primer/loading dye mix. The protocol states that 22.5 μl of the
primer/loading dye is used in the 30 μl reaction. The final concentration of each of the
primers in the 30 μl reaction must be 0.1 – 0.5 μM.
1. The primer’s final concentration in the reaction must be 0.1 – 0.5 μM, so dilute the
primer to 0.5 μM and use this to set up the reaction.
2. Use C1 x V1 = C2 x V2 to calculate the volume of working solution to use.
C1 = 40 μM
V1 = X
C2 = 0.5 μM
V2 = 300 μl
Add 3.75 μl of the primer as supplied by the manufacturer to enough loading dye and
the other reagents to give a total of 300 μl. When 22.5 ul of this mix is used in the
reaction, the final concentration of this primer will be 0.375 μM, which is within the 0.1
– 0.5 μM final concentration limits.
For PCR, the only enzyme required is DNA polymerase. Magnesium chloride is added to
the buffer because magnesium acts as a co-enzyme, fitting into the three dimensional
structure of the protein to activate it. Too much magnesium can reduce the ability of the
polymerase to stay attached to the template (i.e., fidelity is decreased), so the right
concentration (1.0 – 3.0 mM) is crucial. Heating to 94 - 95C denatures the DNA by
increasing the kinetic energy of the atoms, breaking the hydrogen bonds between the base
pairs. Primers (oligo-deoxyribonucleotides) are synthesized commercially to match the
known DNA sequences that surround the fragment to be amplified. These primers anneal
(H-bond) to their complementary sequences as the temperature is lowered to 50 - 65C
(the temperature depends on the sequence of the primers). The temperature is then
increased to 72C, which serves to keep the single strands of template DNA apart. The
polymerase adds complementary nucleotides starting from the 3’ -OH end of the primers.
Enough time is allowed, (30 seconds – 1 minute) for the enzyme to work. The
concentration of the deoxynucleotides in the reaction is also critical. For example, if the
concentration of dNTPs is too high, fidelity of the polymerase (ability to stay attached to
the template DNA) will decrease. When the cycle is complete, two double-stranded DNA
molecules will result, each containing primer sequences on either side of the target DNA.
The reaction is heated again to 94 - 95C to denature the strands and begin another cycle
of replication. Since all newly synthesized DNA molecules have both primer sequences,
these steps can be repeated to yield an exponential increase in the target DNA. After
about 30 cycles, the target is replicated to give over one million copies. See Figure 6.
STEP 1:
DENATURATION
HEATING TO 94C
primer
primer
HEATING TO 72C
STEP 3:
EXTENSION
primer
primer
In review, PCR requires inorganic MgCl2, and four types of organic molecules: template
DNA, DNA polymerase, deoxynucleotides, and DNA primers. PCR consists of four basic
steps:
1. Denaturing the template DNA
2. Annealing the primers
3. Extension (replication) of complementary strands by DNA polymerase
4. Repeating the cycle 30 - 35 times
Gel Electrophoresis
The two PCR reactions from one plant will be combined and run on a 2% agarose gel to
separate different sized alleles, giving a definitive genotype. Agarose is a derivative of
agar, a polysaccharide from algae. An agarose gel of relatively high concentration (vis-à-
vis 0.7 - 0.8% for standard gels) is used because fragments are small (in this case, 250
and 750 bp) and concentrated agarose works better to resolve small DNA fragments. The
DNA fragments, including some molecular weight markers, are often heated to 65C
prior to electrophoresis to straighten any loops formed along the length of the molecules
by weak forces of attraction such as hydrogen bonding. The pH of the PCR reaction
ionizes the phosphate groups so that the DNA has a negative charge. Once loaded into the
gel, an electric current is applied and the negatively charged molecules of DNA move
through the gel toward the positive electrode. The gel has a sieve effect, allowing the
smaller fragments to move more quickly than the larger fragments so separation is based
on the size of the molecules. The gel is exposed to ethidium bromide, a flat or planar
molecule that intercalates (slides between the stacked base pairs) the DNA. Ethidium
bromide fluoresces orange in UV light, making it possible to visualize the DNA (Figure
8). It can be added to the DNA in various ways: placed in the buffer while the gel runs;
added to the agarose during gel casting; or the gel can be incubated with ethidium
bromide after electrophoresis. By running marker DNA of known size and concentration
on the gel as in lane 1, the DNA concentration can be calculated.
1000 bp
800
600
400
200
Primer Dimers
Primer dimers are frequent artifacts of PCR, appearing as bright smears of DNA of
approximately 50 bp or less. They are due to unintentional annealing between primers
and their subsequent elongation, which competes with elongation of the desired PCR
product. The design of primers is of critical importance, for if there is homology between
the forward and reverse primers, especially at their 3’ ends, annealing can occur. For example, a
forward and reverse primer could anneal in the following manner:
5’ AGCTTTGCATCCGTCTGA 3’ Elongation
••••
Elongation
3’ GACTATGATTAGACAGTC 5’
Primers with inverted sequence can also anneal to themselves, forming hairpin structures.
Primer design programs are available so that such errors are avoided, but poor technique
can also lead to primer dimmer formation. The most popular PCR polymerase is called
Taq, short for Thermus aquaticus, a thermophilic bacterium that is found in hot springs
and geysers. Taq is used in programmed PCR reactions because it is not denatured in the
95ºC heating step in each cycle. The optimum temperature at which Taq polymerase
works is 70ºC, but it also has activity at room temperature. When reagents are mixed at
room temperature, nonspecific annealing is enhanced and once amplification begins in
the thermal cycler, these extended primers can produce many copies. To decrease primer
dimers, always keep PCR reagents and the final reaction mix on ice until transfer to the
thermal cycler; then start the cycler immediately upon loading.
Even with good primer design and good technique, primer dimers can form. Hot-start
products and kits are commercially available PCR reagents designed to increase target
DNA amplification by decreasing primer dimers. Hot-start products work by coating
reagents such as the magnesium or the Taq with wax, preventing the polymerase from
working. The first step in the PCR program is a 1-2 minute heating step that melts the
wax, freeing the reagents. Another hot-start method is to complex the Taq with
monoclonal antibodies that prevent enzyme activity until the initial heating step denatures
the antibodies, freeing the enzyme. Brands of enzymes differ. Be sure to follow each
manufacturer’s directions.
10,000
1000
Size of DNA fragments (bp)
100
10
0
10 20 30 40 50 60
PCR fragment 1 * 27 mm
PCR fragment 2 * 20 mm
PCR fragment 3 * 25 mm
LABORATORY OVERVIEW
In this lab, you will use Arabidopsis seedlings as a source of DNA. For PCR analysis, the
DNA Stock Center for Arabidopsis at Ohio State University routinely grows plants on
agar and harvests them when the first true leaves appear. After adding sterilized seeds to
the agar, the plates are given a 3 day cold treatment in darkness, then harvested 7 to 10
days after transferring out of the cold into the light and warmth. The cells of the tiny 7-10
day old seedlings will be lysed and the DNA will serve as the template for PCR. After
amplification, the PCR products will be run on a gel to determine if the plant has two
different alleles (heterozygous CLF/clf) or two identical alleles (homozygous CLF/CLF
or clf/clf ). The base pair size of each allele will be estimated using a standard curve.
RECIPES:
Modified MS agar:
4.3 g MS salts (half the amount used for bacteria culture)
900 ml distilled water
Use 1.0 M NaOH or KOH to adjust to pH 5.7
BTV of 1 Liter
Then add 8 g agar and autoclave for 20 minutes at 120°C. One liter makes 40-50 10 cm
diameter plates.
Edward’s Buffer – yield 50 ml (solid NaCl and concentrated stocks will be used)
Mix the ingredients in a 50 ml bottle. Can be stored at room temperature, indefinitely.
32.5 ml ddH2O
10 ml of 1 M Tris pH 8
2.5 ml of 5 M NaCl
2.5 ml of 0.5 M EDTA
2.5 ml of 10% SDS
Recipes (cont.)
50x Concentrated TAE Electrophoresis Buffer (40 mM Tris-acetate, 2 mM EDTA)
Add the following to dH2O to give a final volume of 1 liter
242 g Tris base (Tris [hydroxymethyl] aminomethane)
57.1 ml glacial acetic acid
100 ml 0.5 M EDTA (pH 8)
Students will dilute to a 1X working solution
SAFETY GUIDELINES
GLP requires wearing gloves and eye protection.
Ethidium bromide is a strong mutagen. Gloves must always be worn when handling
gels or buffers containing this chemical.
Boiling agarose can cause burns. Wear hot gloves when removing agarose from hot
plate or microwave oven.
UV light, used to illuminate the DNA stained with ethidium bromide, is dangerous. Eye
protection must be used.
PROCEDURE
PART I. Prep
Teams should verify all calculations with the instructor before proceeding.
Prepare 100 ml of 0.1% agarose for use by the whole class. Verify calculations with the
instructor before proceeding. Weigh out the correct amount of agarose and place into a
250 mL Erlenmeyer flask. (Clean up the balance when finished!) Add dH2O and swirl
gently. Microwave on high for 1 minute intervals until no particles of agarose can be seen
floating in the liquid when held up to the light. Use the P-1000 pipetter, sterile tips and
sterile technique to aliquot 1 ml into a sterile 1.5 mL microcentrifuge tube for each
student + 1 extra. Cap tubes and distribute one to each student.
Prepare the Edward’s Buffer according to the recipe given in the materials section of this
lab. Aliquot 0.5 mL to each team. (Note: This solution does not have to be sterile, but
MAKE SURE THE NaCl is IN SOLUTION.)
Prepare 30 mL of 30% bleach solution using dH2O. Verify your calculation with the
instructor before proceeding. Aliquot 1 mL in a 1.5 mL microcentrifuge tube for each
Team.
1. Gather all your materials and supplies before you begin. Label your MS agar plate
around the edges on the bottom of the plate (see example, below) with your Team
number, your initials, the lab number or title and today’s date.
2. Each student should get one 1.5 ml microcentrifuge tube containing Arabidopsis
seeds. Add 0.5 ml of 30% bleach solution to the tube. Let soak for 3 minutes,
shaking once each minute.
3. Let the seeds settle to the bottom and then remove the bleach solution with a
micropipetter. You can place the used bleach in the sink at your bench or in a
beaker for waste.
4. Add 200 μL sterile dH2O to rinse the seeds. Let the seeds settle again and remove
the water.
5. Repeat the above step two more times. The seeds are now sterilized.
6. Use a P-1000 pipetter and a sterile tip to add 100 μL of cooled 0.1% agarose to
the sterilized seeds.
7. Use a P-1000 digital pipetter to carefully pipette the seeds + agarose up and down
to mix. Set the pipetter for 1 ml and draw all into the tip. (NOTE: seeds get caught
in smaller tips, so use the P-1000.)
8. Use sterile technique to carefully dot the agarose-seed solution onto an MS agar
plate so as to get growth as seen in the photo, below.
9. Wrap the plate in aluminum foil to keep out all light and place at 4°C for three
days.
10. After the incubation at 4°C, remove the aluminum foil and transfer the plates to a
37°C incubator for approximately 5 hours. Then transfer plates to the plant
growth chamber and grow in constant light for 7-10 days.
2. Obtain your team MS agar plate with seedlings from the plant growth chamber.
Observe your plants using a dissecting microscope. Record any observations
regarding the seedling you choose to use. A digital camera can be used to take a
photo of the seedling, if desired. Your instructor can demonstrate this.
3. Pick one of the larger seedlings from your MS agar plate and place into a 1.5 mL
microcentrifuge tube. Brush off any excess agar clinging to the roots. (Note: it is
no longer necessary to keep the plant sterile.)
4. Use a disposable micro pestle to grind the plant for approximately 1 minute.
Notice that the tip of the pestle does not go flush into the bottom of the tube, so
you may need to use a pipette tip to pull the tissue up along the side of the tube
and grind it more. The tissue should have a liquid consistency.
5. Add 400 μL of Edward’s Buffer. Grind briefly to get all tissue off the pestle.
6. Vortex the capped tube for 5 seconds and then let sit at room temperature for 5
minutes.
8. Do not disturb the pellet as you transfer 350 μL of the supernatant, which contains
the DNA, to a new labeled 1.5 mL tube. If you disturb the pellet, centrifuge again.
Label with your team number and your initials.
9. Add 400 μL of cold isopropanol to the 350 μL of supernatant. Rock the tube to
mix and place on ice for 3 minutes. This step precipitates the DNA.
10. Place the tube into the microcentrifuge so that the tube’s hinge is on the outer
circumference of the rotor. Spin for 5 minutes at maximum speed. The DNA
pellet will form at the bottom of the tube on the hinge side. This small pellet of
DNA may not be visible, so it is important to know where it is in the tube.
11. Remove the isopropanol by decanting and then keep the tube inverted on a paper
towel. The slight amount of alcohol in the top of the tube can be removed with a
Kim wipe or sterile swab.
12. Resuspend the DNA in 50 μL of TE Buffer. Tap the tube with your finger to mix.
It is not always a good idea to pipette DNA up and down or to vortex because
either can shear chromosomal DNA.
13. If there are flecks of plant debris still visible, centrifuge the DNA-TE to pellet the
debris. You will only need a small amount for the PCR reaction, so you will have
plenty, and you can centrifuge again just before you use it.
2. Label two Ready-To-Go PCR pellet-containing tubes with your Team number and
date. Mark one tube as Wt (for wild type, which will contain the forward and
reverse wild type primers) and one tube as Ds (which will contain the transposon
Ds Primer + forward Wt primer).
3. Add 22.5 μL of the correct primer/loading buffer mixture into the appropriately
labeled tube. Tap each tube to dissolve the beads.
4. Add 2.5 μL of your Team’s DNA-TE mixture into the tube with the dissolved
bead and primer/loading buffer. Close the lid and tap the PCR tubes with your
finger to mix and then sharply rap the tubes on the bench top to move all the
liquid to the bottom. Place the tubes on ice.
5. Place your tubes into the thermal cycler when all teams are ready to amplify their
DNA.
6. Place the heat bonnet on the top of the tubes and start. The program for
amplification of these products is:
4°C hold
Note: Since up to 8 teams can load on one gel, the instructor will demonstrate how to cast
the gel. In the future, gels will be cast by the students.
2. To cast a 2% agarose gel, weigh out 1.0 gram of agarose and place in a 250 ml flask.
(GLP: Clean up the balance when finished!) Add 50 ml 1X TAE Electrophoresis
Buffer and microwave in 30 second intervals, removing the flask and gently swirling
to mix after each heating. (Make sure you use hot mitts!) Continue until the agarose is
completely melted, 1-3 minutes. Hold the flask up to the light and make sure that all
the agarose is melted. The agarose will appear thick and may contain bubbles. Check
the volume after heating by pouring the molten gel into a graduated cylinder. Add
more dH2O to bring the volume to 55 ml. (Even thought the concentration is slightly
less than 2%, this volume is necessary for the wells to accommodate the samples to
be loaded.)
3. Let the agarose cool until you can hold your hand on the bottom of the flask for 30
seconds. Pour the slightly cooled melted agarose into the casting tray. Hold an
automatic pipette tip and use it to pop any bubbles that remain in the agar – they can
interfere with the progress of the DNA’s movement through the gel. Insert the comb
about 1 centimeter from the end that will have the negative electrode attached. (To
make this determination, note how the lid fits on the gel rig.)
4. Allow the gel to cool and solidify for about 20 minutes. Do not disturb the gel during
this time. It should look opaque, not translucent, when solid.
5. Gently remove the comb from the solidified agarose by pulling it straight upwards in
one motion. (Note: if the gel is not completely solidified, the wells will be malformed
or will collapse.) If the gel is to be used later, carefully place it into a small Zip Lock
bag and store it at 4C. Clean the rig and air dry, upside down.
1. If your gel was stored, remove it from the zipper bag and place into the gel rig. Add
enough 1x TAE electrophoresis buffer to fill both end reservoirs and cover the gel by
about 5 mm. (Note: too much buffer over the gel can slow the movement of DNA;
too little buffer can cause the gel to melt from the heat generated by the electric
current.)
2. If you have not loaded an agarose gel before, and need practice, use some of the
sample gel loading dye. Your instructor can demonstrate the correct way to load a gel.
There is no need to put the pipette tip into the well when delivering the sample. The
gel loading dye added to each sample is denser than the electrophoresis buffer and
will carry the DNA down into the well when delivered directly above it.
3. Thaw your PCR reactions if they were just removed from the -20C freezer.
4. Pulse spin your PCR reactions to move the fluid to the bottom of the tubes.
5. Combine both of the reactions that each team member set up and pulse spin the
mixture.
6. Heat your reactions along with the molecular weight DNA ladder in a heating block
set at 50C for two minutes.
7. Immediately pulse spin the reactions & DNA ladder to move all the fluid to the
bottom of the tubes. Place on ice.
8. Slowly load each sample in the order directed by your instructor. Include a molecular
weight marker DNA sample in at least one lane of each gel.
9. Add 10 μL of 10 mg/mL ethidium bromide stock to the buffer. (Note: since the total
buffer is about 100 mL, the final concentration of ethidium bromide is 1.0 μg/mL.)
10. Place the cover on the electrophoresis unit, making sure to have the negative
electrode at the well end of the gel.
11. Insert the electrode cords into the proper input of the power supply. Set the power
supply on ‘low’ and turn it on. Set the voltage at 90-95 volts. Check to make sure
bubbles are forming in the buffer on the platinum wire electrodes along the ends of
the gel box. Watch the gel closely for 2 – 5 minutes to make sure that the dye is
migrating in the correct direction.
12. Allow the tracking dye to migrate 4-5 centimeters from the wells so that the
molecular weight marker fragments separate sufficiently.
13. Turn off the power supply, unplug it, and disconnect the electrodes from it. Then
remove the lid from the gel box. Remove the gel tray to a plastic container and
transfer it to the transilluminator.
14. All those observing the gel must have UV face shields on, to protect their eyes and
skin. If your transilluminator has more than one setting, make sure it is on the 302
nm wavelength. Cover the gel with the camera hood and turn on the transilluminator.
Press the trigger on the camera and hold for 3-4 seconds, pull the film tape and
remove the print. Let the print sit for about 1 minute before peeling apart. If the wells
and DNA bands are not both visible, a longer exposure time may be required. The
photo can be copied or scanned so that each team member has a photo to place into
his or her lab notebook.
15. After photo documentation of your results, dispose of the gel and buffer and anything
contaminated with ethidium bromide according to your instructor’s directions.
16. Clean the gel rig and its parts and air dry.
DATA ANALYSIS
Determine the sizes of the Molecular Weight DNA Ladder fragments. This information is
supplied by the manufacturer. Use these known DNA fragment sizes to estimate the
size(s) of the PCR products on your gel. Note whether the plant your team analyzed was
heterozygous or homozygous. Tape the photo of your gel into your laboratory notebook.
QUESTIONS
1. Explain how Ethidium Bromide interacts with the DNA so that it can be
visualized.
2. Why would larger fragments of DNA be more intensely stained with ethidium
bromide than small fragments of DNA?
3. What would happen to your DNA samples if the (+) and () leads on the
electrophoresis chamber were accidentally reversed?
4. Why should paper towels never be used to dry electrophoresis rigs?
5. Explain, in a concise manner, how PCR works to amplify DNA. Discuss the
different reagents and the steps of thermal cycling in your answer.
6. Give three methods for preventing primer dimer formation.
For the following questions, see “How to dilute solid primers” at the back of this lab.
7. Custom PCR primers arrive in the lab. The forward primer contains 25 nmoles
and the reverse 40 nmoles.
a. Explain how you would dilute each primer to a stock solution. To a
working solution.
b. Calculate the volume of working solution of each primer that you would
use to prepare 100 µl of primer/dye solution so that the working
concentration of each primer is 0.25 pmoles/μl.
c. If you set up 30 μl reactions using 22.5 μl of the primer/loading dye mix,
what is the final concentration of each primer in the reaction?
8. Complete the PCR PRIMER CALCULATION Practice sheet on the next page.
Sources:
Campbell, Reese and Mitchell, Biology, Benjamin Cummings; 1999.
Kim GT, Tsukaya H, Uchimiya H., The CURLY LEAF gene controls both division and elongation of cells
during the expansion of the leaf blade in Arabidopsis thaliana. Institute of Molecular and Cellular
Biosciences, University of Tokyo, Japan. Planta 206(2):175-83; Oct 1998
Narita, N.N, Moore, Horiguchi S.G., Kubo, M., Demura, T., Fukuda, H., Goodrich J. and H. Tsukaya,
Overexpression of a novel small peptide ROTUNDIFOLIA4 decreases cell proliferation and alters leaf
shape in Arabidopsis thaliana. The Plant Journal, 38(4), 699-713; 2004.
a. What concentration will you make your working stock for each primer? ______ uM
b. How much of each are you going to make? _________ uL
FORWARD PRIMER WORKING STOCK REVERSE PRIMER WORKING
STOCK
ddH2O _________ uL ddH2O _________ uL
Forward Primer _________ uL Reverse Primer ________uL
_________uL T.V. _____uLT.V.
MASTER MIX
ddH2O _________ uL
Forward Primer __________ uL
Reverse Primer __________ uL
_________ uL Total volume
c. What will be the final concentration of each primer in your master mix? ______
d. What will be the final concentration of each primer in your PCR reactions? _____
2. You have to set up 5 PCR reactions, each with a total volume of 50 uL (45 uL primer master mix
+ 5 uL of the target DNA + PCR reaction pellet). The forward primer is 30 uM and the reverse
primer is 30 uM. Fill in the blanks below that show how you will make up the primer master mix
using each of the primers and ddH2O. Then answer the two questions regarding primer
concentrations.
a. What concentration will you make your working stock for each primer? ______ uM
b. How much of each are you going to make? _________ uL
FORWARD PRIMER WORKING STOCK REVERSE PRIMER WORKING
STOCK
ddH2O _________ uL ddH2O _________ uL
Forward Primer _________ uL Reverse Primer __________ uL
_________ uL T.V. _________uL T.V.
MASTER MIX
ddH2O _________ uL
Forward Primer __________ uL
Reverse Primer __________ uL
_________ uL Total volume
c. What will be the final concentration of each primer in your master mix? ______
d. What will be the final concentration of each primer in your PCR reactions? _____
1. Solid primers are sold in moles of primer, and once diluted, the concentration can
be determined in picomoles/microliter, which is the same as uMolar.
2. For PCR, you need two primers, so make concentrated master stocks for both
that you then keep at -20 degrees C, or -80 degrees C for long term storage. When
you first dilute a primer, you should make sure it is more concentrated, about 100
uM would be appropriate. You can always dilute something, but once diluted, it is
pretty difficult to make it more concentrated.
3. Use the concentrated stock to make a working stock of each primer that is ten
times more concentrated than what you need for your reaction mix.
4. Use the working stock for each primer for the reaction mix OR for combining
with Cresol Red loading dye that will be used in the reaction mix.
5. When you add all components to the reaction mix, the final concentration of each
primer in the reaction should be between 0.1 and 0.5 uM.
EXAMPLE PROBLEM:
1. The forward primer contains 25 nmoles and the reverse primer contains 40
nmoles.
Forward primer = 25,000 picomoles
Reverse primer = 40,000 picomoles
5. Calculate the final concentration of each of the primers in the final reaction mix to
make sure that it is within the acceptable range of concentration (0.1 – 0.5 uM). If
the final volume of the reaction is 25 uL, which includes 2.5 uL of the DNA
template solution, then the volume of the primer-dye mix added is 22.5 uL.
C1V1 = C2V2
(0.25 uM) (22.5 uL) = C2 (25 uL)
C2 = 0.225 uM
This final concentration applies to each of the primers in the final reaction to be
PCR amplified.