• Question: What do you mean when you say "DNA for sequencing?"

    Asked by g30rg1n4 to Lilly on 12 Mar 2014. This question was also asked by jojo1998, horsecat.
    • Photo: Lilian Hunt

      Lilian Hunt answered on 12 Mar 2014:


      DNA is made up of a long backbone with 4 different molecules attached to it in a chain. These 4 molecules are called bases and are either Adenine (A), Guanine (G), Thymine (T) or Cytosine (C). There are 2 strands to DNA running in opposite directions to one another but linked through these bases. So when we sequence DNA we are getting a read out of what order these bases are joined up in a chain e.g AATCGGCAACTG.

      The actual sequencing method itself varies depending how big the bit of DNA you’re sequencing is but it relies on quite expensive machines and can take a few days to complete but it is getting faster and cheaper as the technology develops. There are also lots of different companies developing different methods. Most rely on ‘tagging’ the different bases somehow so when the DNA is run through the machine, it can detect which base comes in which order by a colour or chemical type signal. Then the machine turns it into a computer file that we can use to line up all the bits of sequences it has recorded and we have our DNA sequenced.

      I have to prepare people’s DNA to go through this whole process by breaking it down and purifying it as well as adding things that will help the machine ‘read’ it so that’s what I mean when I say ‘prepare DNA for sequencing’. Hope that helps 🙂

Comments