Restriction site-dependent PCR: An efficient technique for fast cloning of new genes of microorganisms

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Abstract

New bioactive proteins need to be screened from various microorganisms for the increasing need for industrial and pharmaceutical peptide, proteins, or enzymes. A novel polymerase chain reaction (PCR) method, restriction site-dependent PCR (RSD-PCR), was designed for rapid new genes cloning from genomic DNA. RSD-PCR strategy is based on these principles: (i) restriction sites disperse throughout genomes are candidacy for universal pairing; (ii) a universal primer is a combination of a 3′-end of selected restriction sites, and a 5′-end of degenerated sequence. A two-round PCR protocol was designed and optimized for the RSD-PCR: amplify the single strand target template from genomic DNA by a specific primer and amplify the target gene by using the specific primer and one of the universal RSD-primers. The optimized RSD-PCR was successfully applied in chromosome walking using specific internal primers, and cloning of new genes using degenerated primers derived from NH2-terminal amino acid sequence of protein.

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APA

Jiang, Y., Pei, J., Song, X., & Shao, W. (2007). Restriction site-dependent PCR: An efficient technique for fast cloning of new genes of microorganisms. DNA Research, 14(6), 283–290. https://doi.org/10.1093/dnares/dsm023

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