Abstract

Restriction endonucleases play a central role in the microbial immune system against viruses and are widely used in DNA specific cleavage, which is called restriction digestion, for genetic engineering. Herein, we applied digital cell-free protein synthesis as an easy-to-use orthogonal readout means to assess the restriction digest efficiency, a new application of digital bioassays. The digital counting principle enabled an unprecedentedly sensitive trace analysis of undigested DNA at the single-molecule level in a PCR-free manner. Our approach can quantify the template DNA of much lower concentrations that cannot be detected by ensemble-based methods such as gold-standard DNA electrophoresis techniques. The sensitive and quantitative measurements revealed a considerable variation in the digest efficiency among restriction endonucleases, from less than 70% to more than 99%. Intriguingly, none of them showed truly complete digestion within reasonably long periods of reaction time. The same rationale was extended to a multiplexed assay and applicable to any DNA-degrading or genome-editing enzymes. The enzyme kinetic parameters and the flanking sequence-dependent digest efficiency can also be interrogated with the proposed digital counting method. The absolute number of residual intact DNA molecules per microliter was concluded to be at least 107, drawing attention to the residual issue of genetic materials associated with the interpretation of nucleases' behaviors and functions in daily genetic engineering experiments.

Highlights

  • Restriction endonuclease (RE) was discovered as a microbial immune barrier against bacteriophage infection more than fifty years ago [1]

  • The functional protein encoded by the marker gene cannot be synthesized without the integrity of the template DNA (Fig 1A)

  • A simple subtraction of the final DNA concentration from the initial concentration represents the extent of DNA digestion definitely

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Restriction endonuclease (RE) was discovered as a microbial immune barrier against bacteriophage infection more than fifty years ago [1]. The sophisticated restriction system in bacteria and archaea cuts the invading DNA that is not protected by the host methylation modification. A relatively recent discovery of the clustered regularly interspaced short. A digital counting approach for restriction digest efficiency measurement

Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call