Gel Electrophoresis - YouTube

Channel: Amoeba Sisters

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When I was a young kid I was really interested in genetics.
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Well I didn't really understand genetics.
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I kind of thought that when two organisms had a
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baby, the baby was just this blend of the two.
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Yeah that's a misconception.
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But I really saw genetics in action with my guppies.
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Guppies are very easy freshwater fish to keep in an aquarium, but they have
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two things that I think are especially cool.
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They have live birth which means there are no eggs like many
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other fish, and second, they have a lot of babies.
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They also eat their babies, but I don't think that's especially cool so as you
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can see, it's not part of my cool fact list.
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Anyway when my surviving baby Guppies grew up they would have all
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kinds of cool traits.
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These traits were carried by their DNA, their genetic
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material, which is found in their body cells.
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But sometimes I would forget which mother was the mother of the baby guppy, because
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there were several mother fish in the tank, and I wanted to keep track of
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inheritance in my guppy notebook.
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So what would have been very cool to have at
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that time?
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Some biotechnology!
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Biotechnology is the merge of biology and tech, and it's constantly changing!
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It includes topics such as PCR, cloning, and
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genetic engineering.
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It's also an awesome field.
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We're gonna talk about one of the bio technologies that could have, well
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potentially, helped me determine the genetic relationships of my guppies... if
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you know as a young kid I had access to it.
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Although it's becoming way more common in classrooms now.
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And that biotechnology is gel electrophoresis!
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Gel electrophoresis can be used to separate molecules
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based on how big they are (their size) and it's especially useful with
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DNA.
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Let's look at DNA real quick.
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So here is a guppy cell.
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Here's the nucleus in the guppy cell.
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Here's the DNA in the nucleus of the guppy cell, and if you were
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to zoom into the DNA, here is a nucleotide which is a building block of DNA.
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See those phosphates in the nucleotides?
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They're a bit negative.
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Well they contribute a negative charge anyway to the DNA.
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So if we look at this whole DNA here it gives that DNA a negative charge.
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That's a big deal, because gel electrophoresis which again separates molecules
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based on size relies on the fact that DNA molecules have a negative charge.
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Okay, here's a gel electrophoresis machine.
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The point of the machine is to be able to have an electrical charge
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running through a gel so here's the gel typically made of agarose.
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Agarose is a polysaccharide polymer, which if you remember
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from our biomolecule video, polysaccharides are carbohydrates.
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Yeah, usually agarose comes from seaweed.
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The agarose gel itself lets the DNA molecules
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travel within it.
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One end of the gel has these holes called wells.
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The wells are where the DNA is placed into The area of the gel where the wells are is
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negatively charged, and the area of the gel here is positively charged.
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So guess where the DNA will travel towards?
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Well since it's negatively charged, it's going to travel to the positive side.
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So typically when you're analyzing DNA in electrophoresis
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you use these restriction enzymes to cut the DNA up into
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tiny pieces.
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Restriction enzymes have the ability to cut up DNA in very specific
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areas, often related to the specific DNA bases, making restriction enzymes
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very useful in biotechnology.
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So if I had baby guppy DNA and adult mother guppy
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DNA, and I want to compare them, then I would want to use the same types of
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restriction enzymes in both DNA samples.
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If I used the same type of restriction enzyme, it should be cutting the DNA at the
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same identification points in the DNA samples.
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However, unless the mother and baby guppy are clones (and they're
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not), those pieces that result after the restriction enzyme is done with them may
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be differently sized because the DNA of the baby and mother guppy had some
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differences in the sequence of their DNA bases.
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So the DNA samples both are cut into multiple pieces by the same type of restriction
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enzyme and then those samples are loaded into the gel sample1 and
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sample2.
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If we turn on the machine and let the DNA run through the gel, the DNA
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moves towards the positive side.
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But some pieces of that cut up DNA will move faster
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or slower than other pieces.
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Longer DNA pieces tend to have a higher molecular weight and they take more time
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to make it across the gel when you compare it to shorter DNA pieces which
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move at a faster rate.
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So what you end up with is that these DNA fragments spread
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out with the longer pieces closer to the wells and the shorter pieces closer to
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this opposite side of the gel.
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These are called DNA bands, but to see them, you
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usually need to stain the gel itself and view it under a UV light.
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Now let's compare the DNA bands in this hypothetical
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simplified guppy situation.
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The bands aren't going to be identical, because these fish are not clones, but I
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can compare how similar the bands are and compare that to other mother guppy
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samples to look for relationships.
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Let's say that we have three mother guppy samples to view and these are the only possible
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mothers from the fish tank.
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Which one appears to be the most related to the offspring in this case and has a
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high likelihood of being the mother?
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Well this one.
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But we can't be 100% sure with this, It would be helpful for me to know the
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father guppy sample too because this will give you more insight.
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But if these are the only fish in the tank, it's
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a very high likelihood with this case.
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Also, you can use something called a DNA ladder!
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You can buy them from various science material distributors, but a DNA
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ladder is not what it sounds like.
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It's basically a sample that has known fragment sizes so if you run it in the electrophoresis
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machine, you already know the fragment lengths.
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Let's say this DNA ladder only had three bands, which is not
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usually the case.
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Since it's a DNA ladder, the base pair lengths are known.
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They are 500 base pairs, 1,000 base pairs, and 1,500
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base pairs.
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Think fora minute...where would they fit in?
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It would look like this!
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You can use this now as a reference to give estimates of
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how large the other fragments are when they're run alongside it, and if you want
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to be closer to the value, you can use a stand my love graph something to look up.
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So why do we care about gel electrophoresis?
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It's not likely I'll be actually using this with my guppies anyway,
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right?
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Well perhaps.
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But gel electrophoresis is often a step used in determining
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relatedness with different species, which help scientists better classify
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organisms!
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It's also used as part of DNA fingerprinting.
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DNA fingerprinting is a way that one can identify someone's DNA which can be very helpful
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if you're trying to solve a mystery involving a crime scene.
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If you have a DNA sample from a crime scene, you
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can go through the steps of gel electrophoresis to compare it to the
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suspect DNA to see the likelihood of a match.
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In fact, you can take the results from gel electrophoresis and isolate genes
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of interest by something called southern blotting.
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Definitely something to look up if you're curious.
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Gel electrophoresis is one of many awesome tools
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in biotechnology.
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Well...that's it for the amoeba sisters, and we remind you
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to stay curious.