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Physical Mapping I. CIS 667 February 26, 2004. Physical Mapping. A physical map of a piece of DNA tells us the location of certain markers A marker is a short sequence Given a sequence and a chromosome - try to find the place of the sequence. C. D. H. G. B. C. A. G.
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Physical Mapping I CIS 667 February 26, 2004
Physical Mapping • A physical map of a piece of DNA tells us the location of certain markers • A marker is a short sequence • Given a sequence and a chromosome - try to find the place of the sequence C D H G B C A G
Physical Mapping • Generally used to resolve regions much larger than 1 Mb (e.g. whole chromosomes) • Map is created by fragmenting the DNA molecule using restriction enzymes and then looking for overlaps • The pieces are too big to sequence, so this is not the same problem as fragment assembly!
An Example - Cystic Fibrosis • Cystic fibrosis is a fatal disease • 1 in 25 Caucasians carries a faulty cystic fibrosis gene • Children who inherit faulty genes from both parents become sick • Best hope for a cure starts with finding the responsible gene • In the mid 80s nothing was known about the CF gene so a search was started for it
An Example - Genetic Mapping • Restriction fragment length polymorphism (RFLP) was used to construct a map of the human genome with one marker every 10 million nucleotides • RFLP based on variability of certain nucleotides between different people • These cause restriction fragments of different lengths to be produced
An Example - Genetic Mapping • A statistical study of 21 families over three generations narrowed the search led to an area of length 1 million bp on chromosome 7 between 2 markers • The presence of two phenotypes together more often leads to the conclusion that the genes are physically close due to the way crossover works to reshuffle genomic material
An Example - Physical Mapping • Now physical mapping was needed to more precisely locate the CF gene • The DNA molecule was broken into pieces 50 Kb long • Now the correct ordering of the pieces had to be obtained • They are cloned to obtain a large number of copies in a clone library • Now the clones must be ordered
An Example - Physical Mapping • The idea is to describe each clone using a fingerprint to describe the clones • Can be thought of as “key words” for the clones • Overlapping clones should have similar fingerprints X Y Z Q
An Example - Physical Mapping • Fingerprints can be • Sizes of restriction fragments of clones • List of probes hybridizing to the clones • The CF gene was close to RFLP DS78 marker • A probe for this RFLP was used to find a clone containing it • The clone was sequenced at the end and a new probe designed to move closer to the gene - (chromosome walking)
Physical Mapping • Two generic ways of obtaining fingerprints are • Restriction site analysis • Hybridization • Restriction site analysis locates the restriction sites of an enzyme on the target DNA • Generally applicable with smaller DNAs • Viral and mitochondrial DNA
Physical Mapping • In hybridization mapping we check whether certain small sequences bind to fragments • More widely used nowadays, especially for large scale physical mapping • Due to lack of information and errors, we may not be able to produce a single contiguous physical map • May have lack of coverage or chimeric clones
Restriction Site Mapping • There are two techniques for measuring the length of fragments between restriction sites • Apply two different restriction enzymes to the target DNA • Each enzyme cuts at a different location • Apply enzyme A, apply enzyme B, and also apply both A and B together • Now we have a three sets of fragments of various lengths
Restriction Site Mapping • The discovery of the original ordering of these fragments is called the double digest problem
Partial Digest Problem • A variant of the double digest approach is partial digest • Use just one enzyme, but for varying amounts of time • Fragments of different lengths will be produced
Restriction Site Mapping • Problems • Uncertain lengths • Gel electrophoresis gives error up to 5% • Fragments may be too short to measure • May lose fragments
Hybridization Mapping • Done using markers called STS (Sequenced Tagged Sites) • Uses PCR techniques to identify unique sequences • Verify whether the clone allows some probes to bind (hybridize) • See if the clones have overlapping sets of binding probes
Hybridization Mapping • Problems • False negative • False positive • Chimeric clones • Deletion • Repeats (not for STS)