Lab #4 BLAST by Severin Robins

What protein did you search for?

I searched for the protein Cas9 which is part of the adaptive immune system used by bacteria that provides protection against viruses. I chose this protein because it is apart of CRISPR which is something that was recently discovered and has to potential to revolutionize medicine and other fields of science.

Watch the link below if you want to learn more! Kurzgesagt - In a Nutshell does a great job of explaining what CRISPR is, and the possible ramifications of it.


What specific protein did you select (be careful here – a search for insulin will also give you results for insulin receptors and many other insulin-related molecules)?

Type II CRISPR RNA guided endonuclease Cas9

What is the amino acid sequence that codes for this protein? Cut and paste from the database and put these search results (or no more than the first 15 typed lines) in your lab report.  

Tyr-Phe-Ser-Leu-Phe-Phe-Ile-Ile-Tyr-Pro-Asn-Leu-His-Pro-Val

Translate the first 10 amino acids from this code into the amino acid names.

Tyrosine-Phenylalanine-Serine-Leucine-Phenylalanine-Phenylalanine-Isoleucine-Isoleucine-Tyrosine-Proline

Copy and paste the citation of the paper from which the data are drawn; you will need the authors, title, and journal. If there is more than one reference cited, use only the first.


T, G. (2015). Complete genome sequence of Finegoldia magna, an anaerobic opportunistic pathogen. Epub. doi:10.1093/dnares/dsm030

What is the nucleotide sequence that codes for this protein? Cut and paste from the database and put these search results (or no more than the first 15 typed lines) in your post.

ATGAAAAGCGAAAAAAAATATTATATCGGATTGGATGTAGGTACTAATAGTGTAGGATGGGCTGTGACTG
ACGAATTCTATAATATTCTTAGAGCCAAAGGAAAAGATTTGTGGGGAGTAAGATTATTTGAAAAAGCAGA
CACTGCAGCAAACACAAGAATATTTAGAAGTGGTAGAAGAAGAAACGACAGAAAAGGTATGCGTCTTCAA
ATTTTGAGAGAAATTTTTGAAGATGAAATCAAAAAGGTTGACAAAGACTTCTATGACAGACTTGATGAAA
GCAAATTCTGGGCTGAAGACAAGAAAGTATCTGGGAAATATTCGTTATTTAATGATAAAAATTTCAGCGA
CAAGCAATATTTTGAAAAGTTTCCTACTATTTTTCATCTTAGAAAATATTTAATGGAAGAACATGGAAAA
GTAGACATTAGATACTATTTTCTAGCTATCAATCAAATGATGAAAAGAAGGGGACATTTTCTAATAGATG
GTCAGATTTCTCACGTTACAGATGATAAACCATTAAAAGAACAACTTATTCTATTAATAAATGATTTATT
AAAAATCGAATTAGAAGAAGAGCTTATGGATTCGATATTTGAAATTTTGGCGGATGTGAACGAGAAAAGA
ACAGACAAGAAAAACAATCTAAAAGAGCTTATAAAAGGACAAGATTTTAATAAACAAGAAGGTAACATCC
TAAACTCGATTTTTGAATCAATAGTTACTGGTAAAGCAAAAATAAAAAATATAATTTCAGATGAAGACAT
TCTTGAAAAAATAAAGGAAGATAACAAGGAAGATTTCGTTCTTACAGGAGATAGCTACGAGGAAAATCTC
CAATATTTTGAGGAAGTTTTACAAGAAAACATAACATTGTTTAACACACTTAAATCAACATATGATTTTT
TAATCCTTCAATCTATTTTAAAAGGTAAGAGCACACTTTCTGATGCACAAGTCGAACGATACGATGAACA
TAAAAAAGACCTCGAAATACTTAAAAAAGTAATAAAAAAATACGATGAAGATGGAAAATTGTTCAAGCAA

Comments

  1. Prokaryotes can do truly amazing things. I did some reading about CRISPR and it looks like it was actually first discovered in archaea, then bacteria. I wonder what else is waiting for us in all of the unstudied archaea? Are we trying to use the idea of creating DNA sequences with pieces of DNA from viruses to try and prevent humans from ever having to fight off diseases? I also saw some stuff about preventing or fixing mutations in DNA, but I wasn't totally sure what scientists are thinking of taking from bacteria in order to make that happen?

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