Gene Cloning Problem: Insulin Gene Multiplication Mistake

  • Thread starter Thread starter Raghav Gupta
  • Start date Start date
  • Tags Tags
    Cloning Gene
AI Thread Summary
In a molecular cloning experiment aimed at multiplying the insulin gene in bacterial cells, students encountered both transformed and non-transformed colonies, indicating a mistake in the procedure. The discussion highlights the importance of the ligation step, which is crucial for preventing the recircularization of the plasmid. A misunderstanding of the cloning terminology, such as using "recombine" instead of "ligation," was noted. Participants emphasized the need to identify which specific step was omitted that typically prevents plasmid recircularization. The conversation underscores the complexities of gene cloning and the critical nature of each procedural step.
Raghav Gupta
Messages
1,010
Reaction score
76

Homework Statement



Molecular cloning experiments are carried out to generate multiple copies of a gene of interest. In one such experiment carried out at a student lab, the gene coding for insulin is multiplied in a bacterial cell. In the screening step, the students realized that they have committed a mistake and they observe many transformed and non-transformed bacterial colonies. Explain this situation with appropriate reasoning.

Homework Equations


NA

The Attempt at a Solution


After the restriction enzymes are used, is it that some plastid is not able to recombine with particular gene and the same plastid combine?
 
Physics news on Phys.org
Raghav Gupta said:
After the restriction enzymes are used, is it that some plastid is not able to recombine with particular gene and the same plastid combine?

There are a number of explanations I can think of, but yours seems reasonable. I would not use the word "recombine," however, as it has a specific definition in biology. Rather, the correct term for cloning would be ligation. It is worth considering which step in the cloning procedure usually prevents recircularization of the plasmid during the ligation step.
 
Ygggdrasil said:
There are a number of explanations I can think of, but yours seems reasonable. I would not use the word "recombine," however, as it has a specific definition in biology. Rather, the correct term for cloning would be ligation. It is worth considering which step in the cloning procedure usually prevents recircularization of the plasmid during the ligation step.
But what mistakes the student have done? It will happen naturally always that some will transform and some not.
 
What step in the cloning procedure normally prevents recircularization of the plasmid during the ligation step? That is the step that was likely omitted if your hypothesis is true.
 
Ygggdrasil said:
What step in the cloning procedure normally prevents recircularization of the plasmid during the ligation step? That is the step that was likely omitted if your hypothesis is true.
I don't know that step. I searched ligation in wikipedia but was not able to get the step.
 
I don't get how to argue it. i can prove: evolution is the ability to adapt, whether it's progression or regression from some point of view, so if evolution is not constant then animal generations couldn`t stay alive for a big amount of time because when climate is changing this generations die. but they dont. so evolution is constant. but its not an argument, right? how to fing arguments when i only prove it.. analytically, i guess it called that (this is indirectly related to biology, im...

Similar threads

Replies
0
Views
17K
Replies
0
Views
22K
Replies
1
Views
25K
Replies
0
Views
21K
Replies
1
Views
28K
Replies
2
Views
69K
Replies
6
Views
6K
Back
Top