Anmelden

Restriction enzymes are bacterial enzymes used to cut DNA in a sequence-specific manner. To cleave DNA, they bind to specific palindromic sequences called restriction sites. Such palindromic DNA sequences or inverted repeats are commonly found in regions of functional significance, such as the origin of replication, gene operator sites, and regions containing transcription termination signals.

The host bacteria protect their own genomic DNA from these enzymes by methylating these sites. Some bacteria have enzymes that have both abilities to cut the DNA and methylate it with the same sequence specificity. EcoRI acts as a restriction enzyme when it is a dimer of identical subunits. As a monomer, it acts as a methylase. Other bacteria have two different enzymes to carry out each function. This strategy of restriction and modification prevents bacterial viruses from attacking the bacterial genome.

Because different bacterial species produce different restriction enzymes, each enzyme has a unique restriction site and is named after the bacterium of origin. For instance, EcoRI is isolated from the E.coli strain RY13.

When DNA is digested with a particular restriction enzyme, all the fragments produced have the same sequence at their 5'and 3'ends. Thus, when a plasmid DNA and an insert are cut with the same restriction enzyme, they have complementary ends that can be easily ligated. The fragments are usually run on an agarose gel to confirm that the length of digested DNA matches the expected length of the fragment.

Tags
Restriction EnzymesDNAPalindromic SequencesRestriction SitesMethylationEcoRIBacterial VirusesBacterial GenomeDNA DigestionPlasmid DNADNA FragmentsAgarose Gel

Aus Kapitel 15:

article

Now Playing

15.16 : Restriction Enzymes

Erforschung von DNA und RNA

29.2K Ansichten

article

15.1 : Rekombinante DNA

Erforschung von DNA und RNA

16.4K Ansichten

article

15.2 : DNA-Isolierung

Erforschung von DNA und RNA

36.8K Ansichten

article

15.3 : DNA-Agarose-Gel-Elektrophorese

Erforschung von DNA und RNA

91.4K Ansichten

article

15.4 : Markierung von DNA-Sonden

Erforschung von DNA und RNA

8.0K Ansichten

article

15.5 : Südlicher Blot

Erforschung von DNA und RNA

17.4K Ansichten

article

15.6 : DNA-Microarrays

Erforschung von DNA und RNA

16.9K Ansichten

article

15.7 : Komplementäre DNA

Erforschung von DNA und RNA

5.4K Ansichten

article

15.8 : FISH - Fluoreszierende In-situ-Hybridisierung

Erforschung von DNA und RNA

18.8K Ansichten

article

15.9 : PCR - Polymerase-Kettenreaktion

Erforschung von DNA und RNA

80.2K Ansichten

article

15.10 : Echtzeit-RT-PCR

Erforschung von DNA und RNA

55.9K Ansichten

article

15.11 : RACE - Schnelle Amplifikation von cDNA-Enden

Erforschung von DNA und RNA

6.2K Ansichten

article

15.12 : Sanger-Sequenzierung

Erforschung von DNA und RNA

749.9K Ansichten

article

15.13 : Sequenzierung der nächsten Generation

Erforschung von DNA und RNA

85.2K Ansichten

article

15.14 : RNA-seq

Erforschung von DNA und RNA

9.5K Ansichten

See More

JoVE Logo

Datenschutz

Nutzungsbedingungen

Richtlinien

Forschung

Lehre

ÜBER JoVE

Copyright © 2025 MyJoVE Corporation. Alle Rechte vorbehalten