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Question
14a. what is blast used for and how is it used to find the identity of a pathogen? b. how does elisa identify a pathogen? c. are elisa tests specific or can they be used to detect many different pathogens? explain.
a. BLAST (Basic Local Alignment Search Tool) is used for comparing nucleotide or protein sequences against a database of known sequences. To find the identity of a pathogen, the sequence of an unknown pathogen is inputted, and BLAST searches for similar sequences in its database. High - scoring matches can indicate the pathogen's identity.
b. ELISA (Enzyme - Linked Immunosorbent Assay) identifies a pathogen by detecting specific antibodies or antigens. Antibodies specific to the pathogen are immobilized on a surface. If the sample contains the pathogen (antigen), it binds to the antibodies. A secondary antibody with an enzyme attached is then added. The enzyme catalyzes a reaction that produces a detectable signal.
c. ELISA tests can be both specific and used to detect multiple pathogens. Some ELISA tests are highly specific for a single pathogen, targeting a unique antigen. However, multiplex ELISAs can be designed to detect multiple different pathogens simultaneously by using a panel of specific antibodies.
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a. BLAST is used for sequence comparison. To find pathogen identity, input unknown pathogen sequence and search database for matches.
b. ELISA detects specific antibodies/antigens. Antibodies bind pathogen (if present), and a secondary antibody - enzyme complex creates a detectable signal.
c. ELISA can be specific for single pathogen or detect multiple. Specific ones target unique antigen; multiplex ELISAs use antibody panels for multiple pathogens.