Title: Restriction Enzymes
1Restriction Enzymes
2What are restriction enzymes?
- Restriction enzymes are proteins that cut DNA.
Because they cut within the molecule, they are
often referred to as restriction endonucleases.
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4Function
- Found naturally in bacteria
- Protects the bacteria from invading viruses
- bacterium modifies its own restriction sites by
methylation so enzyme cannot cut it - When virus injects its DNA the bacteria can
cleave the viral DNA without affecting its own - Able to cut double stranded DNA molecules at a
specific nucleotide pair sequence called the
restriction site
5Nomenclature
- Over 600 restriction enzymes are commercially
available - Named for the bacteria from which they were
isolated - 3 letter system
- Based on Genus and species that the enzyme was
isolated from - Additional letters added to signify particular
strains and order of discovery - Bgl II - Bacillus globigi
- EcoR I - E. coli Strain RY13
- Hind III - Haemophilus influenza
6Probability and Non-Random Sequences
- In a DNA sequence with a random distribution of
nucleotides, there is a clear relationship
between the number of nucleotide pairs in the
recognition site and the frequency of cutting - Enzymes which recognize 4 bases (4 base cutter)
will cut more frequently than enzymes which have
a 6 base recognition sequence (6 base cutter) and
so on. - In random DNA, the probability of finding one
nucleotide pair is independent of any other pair
in the sequence. - In general the probability of a recognition site
is (1/4)n where n is the number of nucleotides in
the recognition site - 4 bases (1/4)4 1/256
- 5 bases (1/4)5 1/1024
- 6 bases (1/4)6 1/4096
- 8 bases (1/4)8 1/65,476
- DNA in organisms is not randomly distributed
however - There may be an organism bias in G/C content
- There may be a difference in G/C content between
coding and non-coding DNA
7How were they discovered?
In 1970 Hamilton Smith accidentally found that a
DNase from the bacterium, Haemophilus influenzae,
cut DNA at specific PALINDROME DNA SEQUENCES
known as RESTRICTION SITES.
8Restriction enzymes bind DNAat specific sites
9In DNA, a PALINDROME SITE is a SEQUENCE OF BASE
PAIRS in double stranded DNA that reads the same
backwards and forwards across the double strand
Example The sequence of base pairs GAATTC is a
palindrome because both sequences of the double
strand READ THE SAME when read from either their
respective "G" or "C" ends.
5... G A A T T C 3 3... C T T A A G 5
10Based on the TYPES OF CUTS they make, there are
two types of restriction enzymes.
5... G A A T T C 3 3... C T T A A G
5
5... G A A T T C 3 3... C T T
A A G 5
11Blunt Ends
12Sticky Ends
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14Sisters Sequence
15Brothers Sequence
Perform a restriction digest on both siblings
how do they compare when you run the results out
on a gel?
16Gel Electrophoresis(the separation of DNA based
on size)
agarose
wells
17Loading a Gel
18DNA is negatively charged (click once to run
animation)
Electrical charge
-
19End Resulta DNA fingerprint
20Gel Analysis
Ladder DNA of known sizes (used as a standard)
Large DNA pieces -these have a hard time
migrating through the gel pores
Small DNA pieces -these can migrate through the
gel pores easily and migrate farther
21DNA sizes measured in Basepairs (bp) or
KilobasepairsKb
DNA samples
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23Recombinant DNA (Chimeras)
- making recombinant DNA from two different sources
whether it be different species or different
tissue sources is an important tool. - Using recombinant DNA technology can lead to
important discoveries about the
structure-function relationship of proteins, how
mutations cause disease, how genes may be
regulated, and to isolate a gene product for
production (ex. Insulin)
24Virtual Restriction Digestions of Plasmids
- http//www.vivo.colostate.edu/hbooks/genetics/bio
tech/gels/virgel.html