Inserting a DNA Sample into a Plasmid
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Plasmids are similar to viruses, but lack
a protein coat and cannot move from cell to cell in the same fashion as a
virus.
Plasmid vectors are small circular molecules of
double stranded DNA derived from natural plasmids that occur in bacterial
cells. A piece of DNA can be inserted into a plasmid if both the circular
plasmid and the source of DNA have recognition sites for the same restriction
endonuclease.
The plasmid and the foreign DNA are cut by
this restriction endonuclease (EcoRI in this example) producing
intermediates with sticky and complementary ends. Those two intermediates
recombine by base-pairing and are linked by the action of DNA ligase. A
new plasmid containing the foreign DNA as an insert is obtained. A few
mismatches occur, producing an undesirable recombinant.
The new
plasmid can be introduced into bacterial cells that can produce
many copies of the inserted DNA . This technique is called DNA
cloning.
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