UNIT 3 3A: Common DNA tools and Techniques Flashcards
Restriction Enzyme
A bacterially produced protein that cuts DNA at a specific sequence of nucleotides called a recognition site; also known as a restriction endonuclease
Recognition (restriction) Site
A specific sequence of nucleotides that is the location for a restriction enzyme to cut
Digestion
(in the context of restriction enzymes) a reaction using an enzyme to break down large molecules
Sticky Ends
Short lengths of unpaired nucleotides in DNA resulting from a staggered cut by a restriction enzyme
Blunt ends
Short lengths of fully paired nucleotides in DNA resulting from a straight cut by a restriction enzyme
Palindrome
A sequence that reads the same in both directions
DNA ligase
An enzyme which joins the phosphodiester backbones of adjacent DNA nucleotides
Polymeraze chain reaction (PCR)
A technique used to amplify a sample(template) of DNA
Primer
Synthetic single-stranded piece of DNA (or RNA) complementary to a specific sequence of nucleotides.
Gel electrophoresis
A technique used to separate different sized fragments of DNA (or protein)
DNA Standard
A DNA sample that contains fragments of DNA of known size
that is used to compare the sizes of unkown DNA fragments in base pairs or kilo base paires; also known as a DNA ladder
Why can RNA Polymerase not be used in PCR?
The purpose of DNA polymerase is to create a copy of the original DNA template. RNA polymerase would create a single-stranded mRNA strand, which is not needed in the PCR process.
Why is DNA taq polymerase specifically required in the process of PCR
DNA “taq” polymerase is specifically used as it can work in high temperatures with high efficiency and amplification capacity, whereas other DNA polymerase enzymes may not be able to work in these environments.
Key ingredients in PCR
1.DNA template
2. Forward and reverse primers
3. Free Nucleotides
4. Heat resistant DNA polymerase (DNA taq polymerase)
Stages of PCR
- Denaturation
- Annealing
- Extension (elongation)