4-6-3 Recombinant DNA Technology Flashcards
What is recombinant DNA?
A form of DNA that contain segments that would not normally exist together.
What are restriction enzymes?
Enzymes that bind to DNA at specific sequences and cut both strands of the DNA at those specific sites, creating DNA fragments.
What is DNA ligase?
An enzyme that “glue” together fragments of DNA via covalent bonding.
How do restriction enzymes and DNA ligase work together to form recombinant DNA?
DNA from different sources are cut using the same restriction enzyme.
The DNA from one source joins the DNA from another source at the “sticky ends” by complementary base paring - hydrogen bonding
DNA ligase “glues” the joined sticky ends together via covalent bonding
Recombinant DNA is now formed containing DNA from different sources.
What are vectors?
DNA molecules that can be joined with DNA fragments that are to be cloned. An example of a vector is a plasmid.
What are plasmids?
Plasmids are small circular self-replicating DNA fragments found in bacterial cells (but NOT in the large circular bacterial chromosome). Plasmids are used as vectors in cloning.
Brief definition of cloning
The production of many identical copies of a desired gene.
Steps of cloning
- DNA to be cloned is isolated and treated with a restriction enzyme.
- Segments cut by the enzyme are linked into a recombinant DNA molecule, possibly incorporated into a vector such as a plasmid.
- Vectors with the to-be-cloned-DNA are inserted into bacteria, where they replicate.
- Cloned DNA can be recovered from the bacterial hosts and used for further experiments or in the production of gene products.