Journal article

The use of resolvases T4 endonuclease VII and T7 endonuclease I in mutation detection

JJ Babon, M McKenzie, RGH Cotton

Applied Biochemistry and Biotechnology Part B Molecular Biotechnology | HUMANA PRESS INC | Published : 2003

Abstract

Mutation and polymorphism detection is of increasing importance in the field of molecular genetics. This is reflected by the plethora of chemical, enzymatic, and physically based methods of mutation detection. The ideal method would detect mutations in large fragments of DNA and position them to single base-pair (bp) accuracy. Few methods are able to quickly screen kilobase lengths of DNA and position the mutation at the same time. The Enzyme Mismatch Cleavage (EMC) method of mutation detection is able to reliably detect nearly 100% of mutations in DNA fragments as large as 2 kb and position them to within 6 bp. This method exploits the activity of a resolvase enzyme from T4, T4 endonuclease..

View full abstract

University of Melbourne Researchers