Restriction enzymes Flashcards

1
Q

What is the difference between endonucleases and restriction endonucleases?

A

Endonucleases cut randomly rather than at specific points.

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2
Q

What is the natural function of restriction endonucleases?

A

They occur naturally in bacteria to protect the bacteria from bacteriophage.

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3
Q

Why doesn’t the bacterial genome get cleaved by the restriction enzymes?

A

Bacterial DNA is methylated at the restriction sites and is therefore protected.

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4
Q

What are Type II restriction endonucleases?

A

They recognise a specific DNA sequence that is often 4 or 6 nucleotides in length. They cut precisely at or near this site.

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5
Q

What does palindromic mean and what relevance does this have to type II restriction endonucleases?

A

It means the sequence will be read the same in each direction. Type II restriction endonuclease restriction sites are often palindromic.

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6
Q

What is the recognition site of EcoRI and does it create blunt or sticky ends?

A

GAATTC, sticky.

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7
Q

What is the recognition site of BamHI and does it cut blunt or sticky?

A

GGATCC, sticky.

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8
Q

What is the recognition site of AluI and does it cut blunt or sticky?

A

AGCT, blunt.

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9
Q

What is the restriction site of Sau3A and does it cut blunt or sticky?

A

GATC, sticky.

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10
Q

What is the benefit of sticky ends?

A

The ends can base pair together via hydrogen bonds which is helpful if you want to rejoin ends.

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11
Q

What is the benefit of the same sticky ends being produced by different restriction enzymes?

A

Different fragments can be joined together even if they have been cut by different restriction enzymes.

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12
Q

What is the frequency of restriction sites in a tetranucleotide?

A

Once every 245 nucleotides.

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13
Q

What is the frequence of a hexanucleotide restriction site?

A

Once every 4096 nucleotides.

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14
Q

What is the process for using restriction enzymes?

A

Reaction is carried out in a microfuge tube using sterile components. It requires an appropriate buffer for the enzyme and is usually incubated at 37 degrees for an hour for the digestion to complete.

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15
Q

How can the restriction enzyme be inactivated?

A

EDTA, heat or phenol.

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16
Q

How can agarose gel electrophoresis be used together and provide use?

A

Used for analysing, mapping and purifying DNA molecules.

17
Q

What is agarose?

A

A highly pure form of agar, extracted from seaweed.

18
Q

How can an agarose gel be prepared?

A

Various plastic shit, buffer, agarose, ethidium bromide, pour into a casting tray and wait for it to set.

19
Q

How can you prepare DNA for electrophoresis?

A

Mix the digested DNA with a loading buffer that contains a dye so you can see what you’re doing. The buffer will also contain sucrose/glycerol to make the sample heavier than the elctrophoresis buffer. The sample will sink to the bottom of the well.

20
Q

Which direction does DNA move in electrophoresis?

A

From the cathode towards the anode.

21
Q

Do smaller or larger fragments move further throughout the electrophorese?

A

Smaller fragments move further.

22
Q

How can the DNA fragments be seen after the electrophorese?

A

Stain with ethidium bromide during or after the electrophorese and place the gel on a UV transilluminator.

23
Q

How can the size of the unknown fragments be determined?

A

Using size markers, usually a HindIII digest of lambda bacteriophage DNA run next to the unknown sample.

24
Q

What is restriction mapping?

A

Working out the relative positions of the restriction sites for particular enzymes.

25
Q

How do you perform restriction mapping?

A

Do a single and double restriction enzyme digest. Electrophorese them in parallel, accurately measure the sizes and work out the relative positions on the DNA molecule.

26
Q

What can restriction maps be useful for?

A

Cloning particular genes or comparing molecules from different sources.

27
Q

What ligase can be used to insert a gene into a cloning vector and where does this ligase originate from?

A

T4 DNA ligase and from bacteriophage T4 where the function is the repair DNA.

28
Q

How does ligation of blunt and sticky ends differ?

A

Sticky ends have to be complementary and base pair by hydrogen bonding. Blunt ends are less efficient but any fragments can be joined.

29
Q

What is the difference between inter and intra-molecular association?

A

Inter is ligating two separate fragments from different sources whereas intra is making a loop with the same fragment. There is no control over which sticky ends ligate.

30
Q

What is the problem with inter and intra-molecular association?

A

There is no control over which molecules join and only a few ligation products will be the desired recombinants.

31
Q

What can be used to remove the problem of inter and intra-molecular association and how does it work?

A

Alkaline phosphatase. It removes the 5’ terminal phosphates. It will be used on vector or fragments so no intra-molecular association can occur.