JoVE 科学教育
Basic Methods in Cellular and Molecular Biology
需要订阅 JoVE 才能查看此.  登录或开始免费试用。
JoVE 科学教育 Basic Methods in Cellular and Molecular Biology
Restriction Enzyme Digests
  • 00:00概述
  • 00:38Background and Nomenclature
  • 01:53Basic Principles
  • 03:03Setting up a Restriction Enzyme Digest
  • 05:55Hints
  • 07:35Applications
  • 09:17Summary

Restriction Enzyme Digests

English

分享

概述

Restriction enzymes or endonucleases recognize and cut DNA at a specific sequence. These enzymes occur naturally in bacteria as a defense against bacteriophages – viruses that infect bacteria. Bacterial restriction enzymes cut the invading bacteriophage DNA while leaving the bacterial genomic DNA unharmed due to addition of methyl groups.

This video explains the basic principles of restriction enzymes including: how restriction enzymes are named and the types of recognition sites and overhangs that exist. Also provided is a step-by-step generalized procedure for how to set up a restriction digest including the necessary components, the order in which the mixture should be assembled, and the typical incubation temperature and time. The importance of inactivating restriction enzymes to prevent star activity is mentioned. Tips for performing multiple enzymes digests and using controls in digestion reactions are also provided.

Procedure

Restriction enzymes, or restriction endonucleases, are used in a variety of different applications in molecular biology. These enzymes recognize and cleave a specific DNA sequence, called a restriction site. The video you are about to watch provides some background information on these miraculous molecules and shows how to set up a restriction enzyme digest. Where do restriction enzymes come from anyway? These enzymes happen to be an adaptation of bacteria that act as a defense mechanis…

Disclosures

No conflicts of interest declared.

成績單

Tags

Cite This
JoVE Science Education Database. JoVE Science Education. Restriction Enzyme Digests. JoVE, Cambridge, MA, (2023).

Related Videos