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Combined subtraction hybridization and polymerase chain reaction amplification procedure for isolation of strain-specific Rhizobium DNA sequences
- Source :
- Scopus-Elsevier
-
Abstract
- A novel subtraction hybridization procedure, incorporating a combination of four separation strategies, was developed to isolate unique DNA sequences from a strain of Rhizobium leguminosarum bv. trifolii. Sau3A-digested DNA from this strain, i.e., the probe strain, was ligated to a linker and hybridized in solution with an excess of pooled subtracter DNA from seven other strains of the same biovar which had been restricted, ligated to a different, biotinylated, subtracter-specific linker, and amplified by polymerase chain reaction to incorporate dUTP. Subtracter DNA and subtracter-probe hybrids were removed by phenol-chloroform extraction of a streptavidin-biotin-DNA complex. NENSORB chromatography of the sequences remaining in the aqueous layer captured biotinylated subtracter DNA which may have escaped removal by phenol-chloroform treatment. Any traces of contaminating subtracter DNA were removed by digestion with uracil DNA glycosylase. Finally, remaining sequences were amplified by polymerase chain reaction with a probe strain-specific primer, labelled with 32P, and tested for specificity in dot blot hybridizations against total genomic target DNA from each strain in the subtracter pool. Two rounds of subtraction-amplification were sufficient to remove cross-hybridizing sequences and to give a probe which hybridized only with homologous target DNA. The method is applicable to the isolation of DNA and RNA sequences from both procaryotic and eucaryotic cells.
- Subjects :
- DNA, Bacterial
Molecular Sequence Data
Biology
Polymerase Chain Reaction
behavioral disciplines and activities
Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology
law.invention
Nucleic acid thermodynamics
chemistry.chemical_compound
Species Specificity
law
Polymerase chain reaction
Rhizobium leguminosarum
Base Sequence
Ecology
Subtraction hybridization
musculoskeletal, neural, and ocular physiology
Hybridization probe
digestive, oral, and skin physiology
Gene Amplification
Nucleic Acid Hybridization
Molecular biology
chemistry
Biochemistry
Evaluation Studies as Topic
Uracil-DNA glycosylase
Primer (molecular biology)
DNA Probes
human activities
In vitro recombination
DNA
Research Article
Food Science
Biotechnology
Subjects
Details
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Scopus-Elsevier
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....e575913063b8f122f5be0f8c577164b3