Restriction Enzymes BclI

A restriction enzyme or restriction endonuclease is defined as a protein that recognizes a specific, short nucleotide sequence and cuts the DNA only at or near that site, known as restriction site or target sequence. The four most common types of restriction enzymes inclue: Type I (cleaves at sites remote from a recognition site), Type II (cleaves within or at short specific distances from a recognition site), Type III (cleave at sites a short distance from a recognition site), and Type IV (targets modified DNA- methylated, hydroxymethylated and glucosyl-hydroxymethylated DNA). The most common challenges with restriction digest include- 1. inactivation of enzyme, 2. incomplete or no digestion, and 3. unexpected cleavage. The enzyme should always be stored at -20C and multiple freeze-thaw cycles should be avoided in order to maintain optimal activity. Always use a control DNA digestion with the enzyme to ensure adequate activity (to avoid interference due to high glycerol in the enzyme). For complete digestion, make sure that the enzyme volume is 1/10th of the total reaction volume, optimal temperature is constantly maintained throughout the reaction, the total reaction time is appropriately calculated based on the amount of DNA to be digested, appropriate buffers should be used to ensure maximal enzymatic activity, and in case of a double digest, make sure that the two restriction sites are far enough so that the activity of one enzyme cannot interfere with activity of the other. Star activity (or off-target cleavage) and incomplete cleavage are potential challenges which may occur due to suboptimal enzymatic conditions or inappropriate enzyme storage. To avoid these, follow the recommended guidelines for storage and reactions, and always check for the efficacy of digestion along with purification of digested products on an agarose gel.

Start discussion

No discussions found

Start your discussion

Share your thoughts or question with experts in your field

Start a discussion

Found 4 matching solutions for this experiment

FastDigest BclI

Thermo Fisher Scientific

Protocol tips
Generation of BclI-rings: Circularization of BclI-digested gDNA molecules into DNA rings was performed as was described by Rossetti et al. [13, 16]. An updated circularization reaction entails (i) digestion of 1 μg of gDNA with 10 U of Fast Digest BclI restriction enzyme (Thermo Scientific, Argentina) in a volume of 30 μL by 30 min at 37 °C, followed by heat inactivation 20 min at 80 °C and ethanol precipitation; (ii) fragment-ends’ self-ligation with 3 Weiss U/0.5-μg-gDNA of T4 DNA Ligase (Thermo Scientific, Argentina) in a volume of 200 μL (5 ng gDNA/μL) at 22 °C for 1 h, followed by ethanol precipitation and resuspension in 30 μL of distilled water (approximately 33 ng/μL).
BclI (10 U/µL)

Thermo Fisher Scientific

Protocol tips
A total of 5 μg of mitochondrial nucleic acid was digested according to the manufacturer’s recommendation with BclI or HincII (both from Thermo Scientific) and run on a 0.4% agarose gel in 1× TBE until the fragments of interest had migrated 10 cm into the gel. The gel slab was rotated 90°, and a 0.95% agarose gel was cast around it.
BclI NEB#R0160

New England BioLabs

Protocol tips
The PCR product was digested with NheI and BclI (New England Biolabs) and cloned into the large NheI-BclI fragment of pRZ7075 to create pRZ10350.
Protocol tips
An aliquot (5 ml) of PCR product was digested with 8 U of FbaI (TaKaRa; Otsu, Shiga, Japan) and separated on a 3% agarose gel.
Can't find the product you've used to perform this experiment? It would be great if you can help us by Adding a product!

Outsource your experiment

Fill out your contact details and receive price quotes in your Inbox

  Outsource experiment
Become shareholder Discussions About us Contact Privacy Terms