On Fri, Nov 21, 2014 at 7:26 PM, Nico B.
<
perpetuatet...@gmail.com> wrote:
> that which is responsible for the effect of
> translucency of the pedals when it comes into contact with water-
Annotating genes with function usually requires mutants that lack the
quality you are interested in. So you would need a plant that turns
clear when wet, and also a similar plant (ideally the same species and
cultivar) that does not turn clear when wet. Then you should be able
to remove common factors, and the difference points to a function that
is directly related to your trait of interest. If the pathway is
large, you would have to have many non-clarifying mutants that each
possessed a different mutation (and thus would point you to another
part of the trait's dependencies).
This 'subtraction of commonalities' can be done in several ways....
you could get both plants completely sequenced and then find the
difference in software, or you could do a more molecular approach
where you bind all the mRNA to beads, make cDNA, bind the cDNA to
different beads, and use it to 'soak up' the common mRNAs in the
mutant plant, leaving the difference in solution (which you would then
get sequenced). The latter approach is simplified, and would miss
mutations that didn't end up in mRNA (for example mutations in the
promoter regions), but a similar approach might work for DNA using a
FISH approach where your probe was a clarifying-plant DNA fragment
(using every possible fragment of the clarifying-plant genome, aka a
library).
I like the latter idea, since it reduces the computational workload
and instead uses physics as the computer, but it is certainly a
challenging problem and there are lots of ways to go about it... so
you need to weigh your options and hope you choose the path that makes
the most sense for the problem and resources you have available.