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Hauptverfasser: Muzio, Federico Matías, Sobrero, Patricio Martín, Agaras, Betina Cecilia, Valverde, Claudio
Format: Recurso educativo Open Access
Sprache:en
Veröffentlicht: 2023
Schlagworte:
Online-Zugang:https://eric.ed.gov/?id=EJ1397563
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author Muzio, Federico Matías
Sobrero, Patricio Martín
Agaras, Betina Cecilia
Valverde, Claudio
author_facet Muzio, Federico Matías
Sobrero, Patricio Martín
Agaras, Betina Cecilia
Valverde, Claudio
Muzio, Federico Matías
Sobrero, Patricio Martín
Agaras, Betina Cecilia
Valverde, Claudio
collection Education Resources Information Center
contents Generalised Mutagenesis with Transposon Tn5. A Laboratory Procedure for the Identification of Genes Responsible for a Bacterial Phenotype and Its Regulation, Illustrated with Phenazine Production in "Pseudomonas chlororaphis" Muzio, Federico Matías Sobrero, Patricio Martín Agaras, Betina Cecilia Valverde, Claudio Science Laboratories Science Education Genetics Microbiology College Science Undergraduate Study Biological Sciences Forward genetics involves the identification of an unknown DNA sequence (genotype) associated with the expression of that sequence (phenotype). This is often done by generating variants (mutants) of that feature. One of the most practical methods is transposon mutagenesis, which facilitates the genotype-phenotype association through a sequence tag. This six-session laboratory practical illustrates the concept of forward genetics in bacteria using the random DNA target selection of the Tn5 mini-transposon to generate a mutant library. The target bacterium is "Pseudomonas chlororaphis" subsp. "aurantiaca" strain SMMP3, whose broad-spectrum fungal antagonism is largely due to a diffusible, orange-pigmented antibiotic of the phenazine class. The library is screened on appropriate media to select clones with reduced colony pigmentation. Upon qualitative and quantitative phenotype confirmation, a subset of mutants is subjected to an arbitrary PCR to identify the interrupted genes through an "in-silico" comparative analysis of the sequencing products in public genomic databases. Students thus identify previously described or novel biosynthetic and regulatory genes involved in phenazine production. Along with the objective of illustrating a forward genetics approach, the exercise emulates a real scientific activity in which supervised students pursue a path to interpret the phenotypic consequences of gene knockouts.
format Recurso educativo Open Access
id eric_EJ1397563
institution ERIC Institute of Education Sciences
language en
publishDate 2023
record_format eric
spellingShingle Generalised Mutagenesis with Transposon Tn5. A Laboratory Procedure for the Identification of Genes Responsible for a Bacterial Phenotype and Its Regulation, Illustrated with Phenazine Production in "Pseudomonas chlororaphis"
Muzio, Federico Matías
Sobrero, Patricio Martín
Agaras, Betina Cecilia
Valverde, Claudio
Science Laboratories
Science Education
Genetics
Microbiology
College Science
Undergraduate Study
Biological Sciences
Generalised Mutagenesis with Transposon Tn5. A Laboratory Procedure for the Identification of Genes Responsible for a Bacterial Phenotype and Its Regulation, Illustrated with Phenazine Production in "Pseudomonas chlororaphis" Muzio, Federico Matías Sobrero, Patricio Martín Agaras, Betina Cecilia Valverde, Claudio Science Laboratories Science Education Genetics Microbiology College Science Undergraduate Study Biological Sciences Forward genetics involves the identification of an unknown DNA sequence (genotype) associated with the expression of that sequence (phenotype). This is often done by generating variants (mutants) of that feature. One of the most practical methods is transposon mutagenesis, which facilitates the genotype-phenotype association through a sequence tag. This six-session laboratory practical illustrates the concept of forward genetics in bacteria using the random DNA target selection of the Tn5 mini-transposon to generate a mutant library. The target bacterium is "Pseudomonas chlororaphis" subsp. "aurantiaca" strain SMMP3, whose broad-spectrum fungal antagonism is largely due to a diffusible, orange-pigmented antibiotic of the phenazine class. The library is screened on appropriate media to select clones with reduced colony pigmentation. Upon qualitative and quantitative phenotype confirmation, a subset of mutants is subjected to an arbitrary PCR to identify the interrupted genes through an "in-silico" comparative analysis of the sequencing products in public genomic databases. Students thus identify previously described or novel biosynthetic and regulatory genes involved in phenazine production. Along with the objective of illustrating a forward genetics approach, the exercise emulates a real scientific activity in which supervised students pursue a path to interpret the phenotypic consequences of gene knockouts.
title Generalised Mutagenesis with Transposon Tn5. A Laboratory Procedure for the Identification of Genes Responsible for a Bacterial Phenotype and Its Regulation, Illustrated with Phenazine Production in "Pseudomonas chlororaphis"
topic Science Laboratories
Science Education
Genetics
Microbiology
College Science
Undergraduate Study
Biological Sciences
url https://eric.ed.gov/?id=EJ1397563