Restriction map

A restriction map is a map of known restriction sites within a sequence of DNA. Restriction mapping requires the use of restriction enzymes. In molecular biology, restriction maps are used as a reference to engineer plasmids or other relatively short pieces of DNA, and sometimes for longer genomic DNA. There are other ways of mapping features on DNA for longer length DNA molecules, such as mapping by transduction.[1]

One approach in constructing a restriction map of a DNA molecule is to sequence the whole molecule and to run the sequence through a computer program that will find the recognition sites that are present for every restriction enzyme known.

Before sequencing was automated, it would have been prohibitively expensive to sequence an entire DNA strand. To find the relative positions of restriction sites on a plasmid, a technique involving single and double restriction digests is used. Based on the sizes of the resultant DNA fragments the positions of the sites can be inferred. Restriction mapping is a very useful technique when used for determining the orientation of an insert in a cloning vector, by mapping the position of an off-center restriction site in the insert.[2]

  1. ^ Bitner, R; Kuempel, Peter (February 1982). "P1 Transduction Mapping of the trg Locus in rac+ and rac Strains of Escherichia coli K-12" (PDF). Journal of Bacteriology. 149 (2): 529–533. doi:10.1128/JB.149.2.529-533.1982. PMC 216538. PMID 6276359.
  2. ^ Dale, J; von Schantz, M; Greenspan, D (2003). From Genes to Genomes. West Sussex: John Wiley & Sons Ltd.

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