Nicking endonucleases

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Abstract

Nicking endonucleases are a new type of enzymes. Like restriction endonucleases, they recognize short specific DNA sequence and cleave DNA at a fixed position relatively to the recognition sequence. However, unlike restriction endonucleases, nicking endonucleases cleave only one predetermined DNA strand. Until recently, nicking endonucleases were suggested to be naturally mutated restriction endonucleases which had lost their ability to dimerize and as a result the ability to cleave the second strand. We have shown that nicking endonucleases are one of the subunits of heterodimeric restriction endonucleases. Mechanisms used by various restriction endonucleases for double-stranded cleavage, designing of artificial nicking endonucleases on the basis of restriction endonucleases, and application of nicking endonucleases in molecular biology are reviewed. © 2009 Pleiades Publishing, Ltd.

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Zheleznaya, L. A., Kachalova, G. S., Artyukh, R. I., Yunusova, A. K., Perevyazova, T. A., & Matvienko, N. I. (2009). Nicking endonucleases. Biochemistry (Moscow). Maik Nauka Publishing / Springer SBM. https://doi.org/10.1134/S0006297909130033

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