'Nonrandom' DNA sequence analysis in bacteriophage M13 by the dideoxy chain-termination method

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Abstract

We describe a rapid 'nonrandom' DNA sequence analysis procedure that facilitates the nucleotide sequence determination of large contiguous regions of DNA. The method consists of cloning a restriction endonuclease fragment of interest into bacteriophage M13 followed by construction of a series of nuclease BAL-31 deletion mutants originating from a single site in M13 that is close to the DNA insert. Determination of the size of the deletion mutant is accomplished by hybridization to a complementary single-stranded probe derived from M13 containing the total insert followed by nuclease S1 treatment. Single-stranded M13-insert DNAs of progressively smaller sizes are isolated and analyzed by using a site-specific M13 DNA primer and the dideoxy chain-termination method. In this way, analysis of the DNA sequence proceeds from one end of the total insert to the other in a nonrandom fashion due to generation of a controlled overlapping set of deletion mutants.

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Poncz, M., Solowiejczyk, D., Ballantine, M., Schwartz, E., & Surrey, S. (1982). “Nonrandom” DNA sequence analysis in bacteriophage M13 by the dideoxy chain-termination method. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 79(14 I), 4298–4302. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.79.14.4298

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