type II restriction enzyme

biology
Also known as: type II restriction endonuclease

Learn about this topic in these articles:

DNA

  • polynucleotide chain of deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA)
    In nucleic acid: Nucleases

    Type II restriction endonucleases always cleave at or near their recognition sites. They produce small, well-defined fragments of DNA that help to characterize genes and genomes and that produce recombinant DNAs. Fragments of DNA produced by restriction endonucleases can be moved from one organism to…

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genetic engineering

  • genetically engineered salmon
    In genetic engineering: Historical developments

    Smith purified so-called type II restriction enzymes, which were found to be essential to genetic engineering for their ability to cleave a specific site within the DNA (as opposed to type I restriction enzymes, which cleave DNA at random sites). Drawing on Smith’s work, American molecular biologist Daniel…

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recombinant DNA

restriction enzymes

  • cDNA library
    In restriction enzyme

    Type II restriction enzymes also differ from types I and III in that they cleave DNA at specific sites within the recognition site; the others cleave DNA randomly, sometimes hundreds of bases from the recognition sequence. Several thousand type II restriction enzymes have been identified…

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work of Smith

  • Smith, Hamilton O.
    In Hamilton O. Smith

    …what came to be called type II restriction enzymes. These enzymes not only recognize a specific region in a DNA sequence but always cut the DNA at that very site. This predictable behaviour made type II restriction enzymes valuable tools in the study of DNA structure and in recombinant DNA…

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