SlideShare a Scribd company logo
Introduction to in silico DNA digestion in ApE [ A plasmid
Editor] and Restriction mapping of DNA
Molecular Biology Lab 5
Goals of the Class
• students will learn how to access NCBI [GenBank] database and download DNA
in FASTA file format.
• students will learn how to digest DNA in silico.
• students will learn how to analyse and interpret the results from such digestion
procedures.
Open Source Database Definition
• An open source database are available to everyone freely.
• This is the opposite of a proprietary or closed source database in which it is not available for
everyone.
• Some types of open source databases:
• Government and global data
• Financial and economic data
• Crime and drug data
• Health and scientific data
• Academic data
• Business directory data
• Media and journalism data
• Marketing and social media data
• Miscellaneous data
Health and scientific databases:
• World Health Organization (WHO)
• Food and Drug Administration
• HealthData.gov
• Broad Institute
• National Cancer Institute
• Centre for Disease Control
• PubMed
• NCBI
• Gene Bank
• Google scholar
NCBI
• The National Center for Biotechnology Information advances science and health
by providing access to biomedical and genomic information.
• NCBI has a multi-disciplinary research group concentrating on basic and applied
research in computational molecular biology.
• Together they are studying fundamental biomedical problems at the molecular
level using mathematical and computational methods.
• These problems include gene organization, sequence analysis, and structure
prediction.
GenBank
• GenBank ® is the NIH genetic sequence database, a collection of all
publicly available data on the DNA sequences.
• GenBank is part of the International Nucleotide Sequence Database
Collaboration, which comprises the DNA Data Bank of Japan (DDBJ),
the European Nucleotide Archive (ENA), and GenBank at NCBI.
• These three organizations exchange data on a daily basis.
Other databases provided by NCBI
• In addition to GenBank, NCBI supports and distributes a variety of
databases for the medical and scientific communities.
• These include the Online Mendelian Inheritance in Man (OMIM), the
Molecular Modeling Database (MMDB) of 3D protein structures, a
Gene Map of the Human Genome, the Taxonomy Browser, and the
Cancer Genome Anatomy Project (CGAP), in collaboration with the
National Cancer Institute, Open Reading Frame Finder (ORF Finder),
Electronic PCR, and the sequence submission tools.
DNA Recombination technology
• Technology of the transfer of genetic information(DNA) from one organism to another.
• Basic principles of rDNA technology:
Generation of DNA fragments & selection of the desired piece of DNA.
Insertion of the selected DNA into a cloning vector to create a rDNA or chimeric DNA.
Introduction of the recombinant vectors into host cells.
Multiplication & selection of clones containing the recombinant molecules.
Expression of the gene to produce the desired product.
Enzymes used in Recombinant DNA
• Restriction endonucleases are used as molecular scissors, DNA ligase functions to
bond pieces of DNA together, and A variety of additional enzymes.
• Nucleases
• Nuclease enzymes degrade nucleic acids by breaking the phosphodiester
bond that holds the nucleotides together.
• Restriction enzymes are good examples of endonucleases, which cut within a
DNA strand.
• A second group of nucleases, which degrade DNA from the termini of the
molecule, are known as exonucleases.
A restriction enzyme
• A restriction enzyme (or restriction endonuclease) is an enzyme that cuts double-stranded or single
stranded DNA at specific recognition nucleotide sequences known as restriction sites.
• They break the phosphodiester bonds that link adjacent nucleotides in DNA molecules.
• HOW RESTRICTION ENZYMES WORKS?
Restriction enzymes recognize a specific sequence of nucleotides, and produce a double-stranded cut in
the DNA, these cuts are of two types:
• BLUNT ENDS.
• STICKY ENDS
• These blunt ended fragments can be joined to any other DNA fragment with blunt ends.
NOMENCLATURE OF RESTRICTION ENZYME
• Each enzyme is named after the bacterium from which it was isolated
using a naming system based on bacterial genus, species and strain:
For e.g EcoRI
E = genus Escherichia
co = species coli
R = strain RY13
I= first endonuclease isolated
Optimum conditions for activity of Restriction Enzymes
• Optimum conditions are necessary for the expected result:
• Under extreme conditions such as elevated pH or low ionic strength, Restriction
enzymes are capable of cleaving sequences which are similar but not identical to
their recognition sequence.
• Enzyme cut in non specific position
Vectors
• Vectors are the DNA molecules, which can carry a foreign DNA fragment to
be cloned.
• These are self replicating in an appropriate host cell.
• Most important vectors are plasmids, bacteriophages, cosmids & artificial
chromosome vectors.
Plasmids
• Plasmids are extrachromosomal, double stranded, circular, self-
replicating DNA molecules. Plasmids carry:
1) origin of replication, 2) antibiotic resistance gene(s)
• Usually plasmids contribute to about 0.5%-5.0% of the total DNA of
bacteria.
• A few bacteria contain linear plasmids: Streptomyces sp,
Boreliaburgdorferi. pBR322, pUC
• The plasmids carries genes resistance for ampicillin & tetracycline that
serve as markers for the identification of clones carrying plasmids.
ApE (A plasmid Editor) software
• This free software tool allows a user to perform various tasks
on plasmid sequence.
introduction to plasmid editor software
introduction to plasmid editor software
How to download your plasmid sequence from NCBI
• Accessing DNA files from NCBI [GenBank]
 Google NCBI GenBank
 GenBank: M77789.2
 This is for pUC19 DNA: 2686 bp
 Send to >> file >>> FORMAT: FASTA >>>> Create File
 FASTA format is a text-based format for representing either nucleotide
sequences or peptide sequences, in which base pairs or amino acids are
represented using single-letter codes.
Try digesting the DNA with the following set of enzymes:
Go to the enzyme selector:
Map your Plasmid:
Digestion of pUC19 plasmid with XbaI and
FspI enzymes.

More Related Content

PPTX
Comparative and functional genomics
PPTX
PDF
BITS: Basics of sequence databases
PDF
Poster (Final)
PPTX
Genomics and Bioinformatics
PPTX
Genomics experimental-methods
PPTX
scRNA-Seq Workshop Presentation - Stem Cell Network 2018
Comparative and functional genomics
BITS: Basics of sequence databases
Poster (Final)
Genomics and Bioinformatics
Genomics experimental-methods
scRNA-Seq Workshop Presentation - Stem Cell Network 2018

What's hot (20)

PDF
Resolving transcriptional dynamics of the epithelial-mesenchymal transition u...
PDF
Structural genomics
PPTX
Genomics(functional genomics)
PPTX
Functional genomics, and tools
PPTX
Types of genomics ppt
PDF
Human genetic variation and its contribution to complex traits
PPT
Structural genomics
PPT
Genomics and bioinformatics
PPTX
Genomics and proteomics ppt
PPTX
Genome resource databases in horticutural crops
PPTX
Gene mapping
PPTX
introduction to Genomics
ODP
Genomics Technologies
PPTX
Functional genomics
PPTX
Comparative genomics
PPTX
Genomics,proteomics and comparative genomics
PPTX
Vectors in Recombenant DNA technology
PPTX
GENOMICS AND BIOINFORMATICS
PPT
Comparative genomics @ sid 2003 format
PPTX
Comparative genomics in eukaryotes, organelles
Resolving transcriptional dynamics of the epithelial-mesenchymal transition u...
Structural genomics
Genomics(functional genomics)
Functional genomics, and tools
Types of genomics ppt
Human genetic variation and its contribution to complex traits
Structural genomics
Genomics and bioinformatics
Genomics and proteomics ppt
Genome resource databases in horticutural crops
Gene mapping
introduction to Genomics
Genomics Technologies
Functional genomics
Comparative genomics
Genomics,proteomics and comparative genomics
Vectors in Recombenant DNA technology
GENOMICS AND BIOINFORMATICS
Comparative genomics @ sid 2003 format
Comparative genomics in eukaryotes, organelles
Ad

Similar to introduction to plasmid editor software (20)

PPTX
BIOTECH Q3 M1.pptx TOOLS USED IN GENETIC ENG
PDF
Recombinant DNA Technology & Gene Therapy
PPTX
BP605 T. PHARMACEUTICAL BIOTECHNOLOGY UNIT-II
PPTX
DNA Microarray.pptx, Protein Microarray.pptx
PPT
PPT
Grade 10 Science - Biology Unit 5 DNA and RNA.ppt
PPTX
Dna microarray
PPTX
Recombinant dna
PDF
Biotechnologyppt 140709083729-phpapp01
PPTX
Biotechnology ppt
PPTX
Recombinant dna technology 2017 cloning and pcr
PPTX
DNA MICROARRAY TECHNOLOGY FOR PRINCIPLE OF DRUG DISCOVERY
PPT
recombinant Deoxy-Ribo Nucleic Acid and Biotechnology
PDF
Pharmaceutical biotechnology introduction.pdf
PPTX
Note on DNA,Introduction to DNA ,feature of DNA
PDF
cloning, sudan 2016.pdf
PPTX
Genetic engineering and Recombinant DNA
PPTX
organic chemistry genetic engineering PPT.pptx
PPTX
Data Mining
PPTX
Recombinant dna technology
BIOTECH Q3 M1.pptx TOOLS USED IN GENETIC ENG
Recombinant DNA Technology & Gene Therapy
BP605 T. PHARMACEUTICAL BIOTECHNOLOGY UNIT-II
DNA Microarray.pptx, Protein Microarray.pptx
Grade 10 Science - Biology Unit 5 DNA and RNA.ppt
Dna microarray
Recombinant dna
Biotechnologyppt 140709083729-phpapp01
Biotechnology ppt
Recombinant dna technology 2017 cloning and pcr
DNA MICROARRAY TECHNOLOGY FOR PRINCIPLE OF DRUG DISCOVERY
recombinant Deoxy-Ribo Nucleic Acid and Biotechnology
Pharmaceutical biotechnology introduction.pdf
Note on DNA,Introduction to DNA ,feature of DNA
cloning, sudan 2016.pdf
Genetic engineering and Recombinant DNA
organic chemistry genetic engineering PPT.pptx
Data Mining
Recombinant dna technology
Ad

Recently uploaded (20)

PPTX
2. Earth - The Living Planet earth and life
PPTX
EPIDURAL ANESTHESIA ANATOMY AND PHYSIOLOGY.pptx
PPTX
7. General Toxicologyfor clinical phrmacy.pptx
PDF
Biophysics 2.pdffffffffffffffffffffffffff
PPTX
ANEMIA WITH LEUKOPENIA MDS 07_25.pptx htggtftgt fredrctvg
PDF
Sciences of Europe No 170 (2025)
PDF
AlphaEarth Foundations and the Satellite Embedding dataset
PPTX
Cell Membrane: Structure, Composition & Functions
PPTX
G5Q1W8 PPT SCIENCE.pptx 2025-2026 GRADE 5
PPTX
ECG_Course_Presentation د.محمد صقران ppt
PPTX
Classification Systems_TAXONOMY_SCIENCE8.pptx
PPTX
BIOMOLECULES PPT........................
PPTX
Introduction to Cardiovascular system_structure and functions-1
PPT
POSITIONING IN OPERATION THEATRE ROOM.ppt
PDF
. Radiology Case Scenariosssssssssssssss
PDF
An interstellar mission to test astrophysical black holes
PDF
bbec55_b34400a7914c42429908233dbd381773.pdf
PPTX
cpcsea ppt.pptxssssssssssssssjjdjdndndddd
DOCX
Viruses (History, structure and composition, classification, Bacteriophage Re...
PDF
Phytochemical Investigation of Miliusa longipes.pdf
2. Earth - The Living Planet earth and life
EPIDURAL ANESTHESIA ANATOMY AND PHYSIOLOGY.pptx
7. General Toxicologyfor clinical phrmacy.pptx
Biophysics 2.pdffffffffffffffffffffffffff
ANEMIA WITH LEUKOPENIA MDS 07_25.pptx htggtftgt fredrctvg
Sciences of Europe No 170 (2025)
AlphaEarth Foundations and the Satellite Embedding dataset
Cell Membrane: Structure, Composition & Functions
G5Q1W8 PPT SCIENCE.pptx 2025-2026 GRADE 5
ECG_Course_Presentation د.محمد صقران ppt
Classification Systems_TAXONOMY_SCIENCE8.pptx
BIOMOLECULES PPT........................
Introduction to Cardiovascular system_structure and functions-1
POSITIONING IN OPERATION THEATRE ROOM.ppt
. Radiology Case Scenariosssssssssssssss
An interstellar mission to test astrophysical black holes
bbec55_b34400a7914c42429908233dbd381773.pdf
cpcsea ppt.pptxssssssssssssssjjdjdndndddd
Viruses (History, structure and composition, classification, Bacteriophage Re...
Phytochemical Investigation of Miliusa longipes.pdf

introduction to plasmid editor software

  • 1. Introduction to in silico DNA digestion in ApE [ A plasmid Editor] and Restriction mapping of DNA Molecular Biology Lab 5
  • 2. Goals of the Class • students will learn how to access NCBI [GenBank] database and download DNA in FASTA file format. • students will learn how to digest DNA in silico. • students will learn how to analyse and interpret the results from such digestion procedures.
  • 3. Open Source Database Definition • An open source database are available to everyone freely. • This is the opposite of a proprietary or closed source database in which it is not available for everyone. • Some types of open source databases: • Government and global data • Financial and economic data • Crime and drug data • Health and scientific data • Academic data • Business directory data • Media and journalism data • Marketing and social media data • Miscellaneous data
  • 4. Health and scientific databases: • World Health Organization (WHO) • Food and Drug Administration • HealthData.gov • Broad Institute • National Cancer Institute • Centre for Disease Control • PubMed • NCBI • Gene Bank • Google scholar
  • 5. NCBI • The National Center for Biotechnology Information advances science and health by providing access to biomedical and genomic information. • NCBI has a multi-disciplinary research group concentrating on basic and applied research in computational molecular biology. • Together they are studying fundamental biomedical problems at the molecular level using mathematical and computational methods. • These problems include gene organization, sequence analysis, and structure prediction.
  • 6. GenBank • GenBank ® is the NIH genetic sequence database, a collection of all publicly available data on the DNA sequences. • GenBank is part of the International Nucleotide Sequence Database Collaboration, which comprises the DNA Data Bank of Japan (DDBJ), the European Nucleotide Archive (ENA), and GenBank at NCBI. • These three organizations exchange data on a daily basis.
  • 7. Other databases provided by NCBI • In addition to GenBank, NCBI supports and distributes a variety of databases for the medical and scientific communities. • These include the Online Mendelian Inheritance in Man (OMIM), the Molecular Modeling Database (MMDB) of 3D protein structures, a Gene Map of the Human Genome, the Taxonomy Browser, and the Cancer Genome Anatomy Project (CGAP), in collaboration with the National Cancer Institute, Open Reading Frame Finder (ORF Finder), Electronic PCR, and the sequence submission tools.
  • 8. DNA Recombination technology • Technology of the transfer of genetic information(DNA) from one organism to another. • Basic principles of rDNA technology: Generation of DNA fragments & selection of the desired piece of DNA. Insertion of the selected DNA into a cloning vector to create a rDNA or chimeric DNA. Introduction of the recombinant vectors into host cells. Multiplication & selection of clones containing the recombinant molecules. Expression of the gene to produce the desired product.
  • 9. Enzymes used in Recombinant DNA • Restriction endonucleases are used as molecular scissors, DNA ligase functions to bond pieces of DNA together, and A variety of additional enzymes. • Nucleases • Nuclease enzymes degrade nucleic acids by breaking the phosphodiester bond that holds the nucleotides together. • Restriction enzymes are good examples of endonucleases, which cut within a DNA strand. • A second group of nucleases, which degrade DNA from the termini of the molecule, are known as exonucleases.
  • 10. A restriction enzyme • A restriction enzyme (or restriction endonuclease) is an enzyme that cuts double-stranded or single stranded DNA at specific recognition nucleotide sequences known as restriction sites. • They break the phosphodiester bonds that link adjacent nucleotides in DNA molecules. • HOW RESTRICTION ENZYMES WORKS? Restriction enzymes recognize a specific sequence of nucleotides, and produce a double-stranded cut in the DNA, these cuts are of two types: • BLUNT ENDS. • STICKY ENDS • These blunt ended fragments can be joined to any other DNA fragment with blunt ends.
  • 11. NOMENCLATURE OF RESTRICTION ENZYME • Each enzyme is named after the bacterium from which it was isolated using a naming system based on bacterial genus, species and strain: For e.g EcoRI E = genus Escherichia co = species coli R = strain RY13 I= first endonuclease isolated
  • 12. Optimum conditions for activity of Restriction Enzymes • Optimum conditions are necessary for the expected result: • Under extreme conditions such as elevated pH or low ionic strength, Restriction enzymes are capable of cleaving sequences which are similar but not identical to their recognition sequence. • Enzyme cut in non specific position
  • 13. Vectors • Vectors are the DNA molecules, which can carry a foreign DNA fragment to be cloned. • These are self replicating in an appropriate host cell. • Most important vectors are plasmids, bacteriophages, cosmids & artificial chromosome vectors.
  • 14. Plasmids • Plasmids are extrachromosomal, double stranded, circular, self- replicating DNA molecules. Plasmids carry: 1) origin of replication, 2) antibiotic resistance gene(s) • Usually plasmids contribute to about 0.5%-5.0% of the total DNA of bacteria. • A few bacteria contain linear plasmids: Streptomyces sp, Boreliaburgdorferi. pBR322, pUC • The plasmids carries genes resistance for ampicillin & tetracycline that serve as markers for the identification of clones carrying plasmids.
  • 15. ApE (A plasmid Editor) software • This free software tool allows a user to perform various tasks on plasmid sequence.
  • 18. How to download your plasmid sequence from NCBI • Accessing DNA files from NCBI [GenBank]  Google NCBI GenBank  GenBank: M77789.2  This is for pUC19 DNA: 2686 bp  Send to >> file >>> FORMAT: FASTA >>>> Create File  FASTA format is a text-based format for representing either nucleotide sequences or peptide sequences, in which base pairs or amino acids are represented using single-letter codes.
  • 19. Try digesting the DNA with the following set of enzymes:
  • 20. Go to the enzyme selector:
  • 21. Map your Plasmid: Digestion of pUC19 plasmid with XbaI and FspI enzymes.