Biology, asked by pallavimahale2358, 11 months ago

Explain the classification of restriction endonucleases based on the recognition site and cut-site. Give suitable examples of each

Answers

Answered by Anonymous
2
➡A restriction enzyme is an enzyme that cuts DNA after recognizing a specific sequence of DNA. You can think of restriction enzymes as molecular scissors. Scientists can use restriction enzymes to cut a single gene from a larger piece of DNA. Restriction enzymes evolved in bacteria.
Answered by sri288
0

Explanation:

Naturally occurring restriction endonucleases are categorized into four groups (Types I, II III, and IV) based on their composition and enzyme cofactor requirements, the nature of their target sequence, and the position of their DNA cleavage site relative to the target sequence

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