A method for quantification of recombinant DNA for Roundup Ready (RR) corn and RR soybean in soil samples is described. Soil DNA from experimental field samples was extracted using a soil DNA extraction kit with a modified protocol. For the detection and quantification of recombinant DNA of RR corn and RR soybean, a molecular beacon and two pairs of specific primers were designed to differentially target recombinant DNA in these two genetically modified crops. Soil DNA extracts were spiked with RR corn or RR soybean DNA, and recombinant DNA was quantified using real-time PCR with a molecular beacon. As few as one copy of RR corn genome or one copy of RR soybean genome was detected in the soil DNA extract.
Immunoglobulin genes were directly isolated from the splenocytes of a BALB/C mouse hyperimmunized with the auxinic herbicide picloram conjugated to bovine serum albumin. Variable light and heavy domain DNA were joined to produce single-chain Fv (scFv) DNA, which was cloned into phage vector fd-tet-GIIID to display multiple copies of scFv on the filamentous phage minor coat protein gIIIp. The phage-display scFv library (10(4) clones) was selected against picloram conjugated to ovalbumin. After five rounds of panning, individual clones were analyzed. ScFv with different affinities to picloram (IC(50) values ranging from 20 ppb to 10 ppm) were detected in the final enriched pool. The increased avidity of the phage vector enhanced the selection (i.e., panning) of multiple picloram-specific recombinant antibodies. Stringent selection was required to isolate the clones with the highest affinity. Nucleotide sequence analysis of six isolated clones revealed that all of the V(L) belonged to the V kappa 9A family joined to J kappa 2 segments. All of the V(H) belonged to the V(H)()7183 family and joined to two different J segments (i.e., J(H)()2 or J(H)()4). Different from the immune response to large molecular weight molecules (MW > 10,000 Da), which requires both VDJ segment rearrangement and somatic hypermutations, production of high-affinity antibodies to picloram, a small ligand having a formula weight of 241.5 Da, predominantly requires somatic hypermutations.
Molecular evolution is examined in bacteria with an emphasis on mineral surfaces, membranes, cathodes and anodes. In early molecular evolution, cathode-anode system may have been naturally occurring on a nm to micron scale. Secondly, the cathode-anode system could have been separated by a primitive, permeable lipid or microsphere on a mineral surface, that was a precursor of a more advanced membrane with a charge differential on either side of the membrane. These aspects will be considered from a theoretical evolutionary perspective.
It has been assumed that diffusion of molecules in the bacterial cytoplasm is the mechanism that moves molecules in the absence of cytoplasmic streaming. However, is there an undiscovered mechanism present that mobilizes cytoplasm and its molecular contents, and delivers tRNAs to specific ribosomes at specific bacterial cytoplasmic locations? Mobilization of specific tRNA (and also mRNA transcripts and ribosomes) and cell division proteins to specific intracellular locations may suggest that instructions and/or mechanism(s) are needed. The alternative is that molecular crowding in the cytoplasm is sufficient for gentle contact between mRNA, ribosomes and tRNA. Or is it plausible that the bacterial cytoplasm (and its contents) are mobilized with the outcome being more gentle collisions between molecules than by a diffusion only mechanism? One hypothesis is that cytoplasmic and molecule mobilization and spatial organization are possibly driven by the photons in thermal infrared (IR) radiation and generation of exclusion zone (EZ) water in the cytoplasm.
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