BIOL 200 Lecture Notes - Lecture 7: Capillary Electrophoresis, Frederick Sanger, Dideoxynucleotide

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2 Oct 2016
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A: for many traditional molecular biology protocols, a high concentration of the dna fragment or region is required for analysis (e. g. dideoxy sequencing) Use of dna cloning and polymerase chain reaction (pcr) to obtain dna fragments for analysis is most common. Dna cloning using plasmids (horizontal exchange between bacteria: plasmids. Most common vector in recombinant dna tech. Restriction exonucleases (restriction enzymes) cuts inside the chains of dna. Cleaves or cuts a polar phosphodiester bonds in a symmetrical fashion. Seeks palindromic sequences (same going forward and backwards: some enzymes cut sticky ends- allows ends to base pair/ overhangs. Able to base pair with the complementary. Cuts phosphodiester bonds and then the hydrogen bonds break. Based on a specific sequence: blunt ends- not specific when you stick together. No sequence specificity: how it works. Have genomic dna fragments that have been cut by restriction enzymes. Vector dna is also cut (sticky ends preferred) Align the complementary base pairs (vector and genomic)

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