- Nucleic acid hybridization
Hybridization is the process, discovered by
Alexander Rich , of combining complementary, single-strandednucleic acid s into a singlemolecule .Nucleotide s will bind to their complement under normal conditions, so two perfectly complementary strands will bind to each other readily. This is called annealing. However, due to the different molecular geometries of the nucleotides, a single inconsistency between the two strands will make binding between them more energetically unfavorable. Measuring the effects of base incompatibility by quantifying the rate at which two strands anneal can provide information as to the similarity in base sequence between the two strands being annealed. Annealing may be reversed by heating the double stranded molecule of DNA (or RNA or DNA:RNA) to break thehydrogen bond s between bases and separate the two strands. This is called melting or denaturation.Experimental Procedure
# The double-stranded DNA helix is heated in solution, usually buffered for pH.
# Due to external conditions, the hydrogen-bonded base pairing becomes thermodynamically unfavorable and the complementary strands separate.
# One set of denatured DNA is then mixed with another set of denatured DNA.
# The combined sets are then cooled slowly to allow the DNA to reanneal and form a new "hybridized" DNA molecule.By analyzing the rate at which different sets of denatured DNA reannealed, the relative differences and similarities between species or between individuals within a species can be mapped and compared based on a DNA Difference Score.
outhern and Northern blotting
There exist two kinds of "nucleic acid hybridization". Both are methods in which radioactively labeled single
DNA strands of known base sequences are used as a probe to detect thenucleotide sequence of another single strandedDNA orRNA molecule .The first one is widely used for detection of specific
gene s in cellularDNA . It was developed by E.M. Southern and is called Southern Blotting. TheDNA is digested with arestriction enzyme and the fragments are separated byelectrophoresis . The gel is then overlaid with a nitrocellulose filter, to which theDNA fragments are transferred (blotting) to yield a replica of the gel. Following, the filter is incubated with a radiolabeled probe, which "hybridizes" to the complementary strand. This fragment is then visualized by exposure of the filter to X-ray film.The second method is called northern blotting, it is used to identify the base pair sequence of
RNA .RNA is extracted and fractionated according to size byelectrophoresis . Then the procedure is the same as in Southern Blotting. Northern blotting is frequently used in studies of gene expression (e.g. whether specific mRNA is present in different types of cells).References
*cite web | title=Glossary of Biotechnology Terms | work=Anatomy of a Comparative Gene Expression Study | url=http://www.cs.wustl.edu/~jbuhler/research/array/glossary.html#hybridize | accessmonthday=June 30 | accessyear=2007
*Citation
last =Cooper
first =Geoffrey M.
author-link =
last2 =Hausman
first2 =Robert E.
author2-link =
title =The Cell: A Molecular Approach
place=
publisher =Sinauer Associates, Inc.
year =2004
location =
volume =
edition =4
url =
doi =
id =External links
* [http://www.jbc.org/cgi/content/full/281/12/7693 "Discovery of the Hybrid Helix and the First DNA-RNA Hybridization"] by
Alexander Rich
* [http://www.immunoportal.com Immunohistochemistry - In Situ Hybridization]ee also
*base pairing
*PCR
*melt curve
*complementary DNA
*homology
*Western blotting
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