Answer
a) Option D is correct i.e " HaeIII"
Explanation
The nucleotide sequence i.e " 5' ATCGAACTAGGCC 3' and the recognition site of Hae III enzyme is 5'GGCC3' and this site is present in the mentioned sequence " 5' ATCGAACTAGGCC 3'"
b) Option C and D both are correct i.e " HindIII & ECORI"
Explanation
The nucleotide sequence i.e " 5' TCCAAGCTTGAATTC 3' " and the recongnition site of Hind III enzyme is AAGCTT and the recognition site of ECORI enzyme is GAATTC and these sites are present in the mentioned sequence " " 5' TCCAAGCTTGAATTC 3' "
Answer (c)
The possible sequence of bases are " 5' GWC 3' where W can adenine or thymine so possible sequences are
5' GAC 3' or 5' GTC 3'.
The table shows where different restriction endonucleases (restriction enzymes) cleave DNA. The abbreviation R represents the...
Need Part C answered only.
The table shows where different restriction endonucleases (restriction enzymes) cleave DNA. The abbreviation R represents the purines (adenine and guanine). The pyrimidines (cytosine, thymine, and uracil) are abbreviated as Y. The abbreviation W represents adenine or thymine. Enzyme EcoRI EcoRV Target sequence 5' GAATTC 3' 3' CTTAAG 5 5' GATATC 3 3' CTATAG 5 5' GGCC 3 3' CCGG 5 5' AAGCTT 3' 3' TTCGAA 5 5'RGGWCCY 3 3' YCCWGGR 5 Cleavage 5'G AATTC 3'...
ng Learning The following table shows where different restriction endonu abbreviation R represents the purines (adenine and guanine). The pyrimidines (cytosine, thymine, and uracil) are abbreviated as Y. The abbreviation W represents adenine or thymine cleases (restriction enzymes) cleave DNA. The Cleavage 5' G EcoRI 5 GAATTC 3 AATTC 3 5' 3 CTTAAG 5' EcoRV 5 GATATC 3 3' CTATAG 5 3' CTTAA 5 GAT ATC 3 Hae? Hindlll PpuMI5' RGGWCCY 3 3' CTA TAG 5 ?'CC GG5. 5 A...
Which of the following restriction enzymes do(es) generate sticky ends? A) Enzyme Recognition BamHI G↓GATCC CCTAG↑G B) Enzyme Recognition EcoRI G↓AATTC CTTAA↑G C) Enzyme Recognition HaeIII GG↓CC CC↑GG D) Enzyme Recognition HindIII A↓AGCTT TTCGA↑A E) all of the above, except c
Identify two restriction
endonucleases that could be used to make sticky ends near the
5’ end of this DNA sequence (upper strand) so that
it could be incorporated into a new plasmid. You have a short list
of them in Table 9-2, and the specific, short sequences of bases
that other enzymes cut at are easily obtained from web resources.
You must cut as near to the 5' end as possible. Indicate the
specific sequences of bases for each endonuclease...
Which of the following restriction endonucleases produces 3' overhangs? (position where the enzyme cuts is indicated by an arrow) A. EcoRI (5'-G↓AATTC-3') B. HindIII (5'-A↓AGCTT-3') C. EcoRV (5'-GAT↓ATC-3') D. PstI (5'-CTGCA↓G-3')
please answer question numbe 2.
Restriction endonucleases are bacterial enzymes that recognize, bind, and cut DNA strands at specific recognition sequences. They evolved to protect bacteria from bacterial viruses and are very useful for a wide variety of molecular biology applications. Some of the more common ones include EcoRI which recognizes the 6 bp sequence 5 'GAATTC 3' and cleaves the phosphodiester backbone after the G. Hind III_(AAGCTT), BamHI (G|GATCC), Pstl (CTGCAG), Not! (GC|GGCCGC), Ndel (CATATG) Kpnl (GGTAC^C), Bgl II...
Chromosomal and plasmid DNA can be cut into manageable pieces by
restriction enzymes. Using agarose gel electrophoresis, the DNA
fragments can be separated on a gel, based on their lengths. In
order to see the fragments, a stain is typically added to the gel.
The size of each fragment can be determined by comparing each one
to a DNA molecular weight marker of known size.
Below is a map of pBR22 plasmid. The position and base pair
number of the...