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  2. Deoxyribonuclease - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deoxyribonuclease

    DNase is commonly used when purifying proteins that are extracted from prokaryotic organisms. Protein extraction often involves the degradation of the cell membrane . It is common for the degraded and fragile cell membrane to be lysed , releasing unwanted DNA and the desired proteins.

  3. DNase footprinting assay - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DNase_footprinting_assay

    A DNase footprinting assay [1] is a DNA footprinting technique from molecular biology/biochemistry that detects DNA-protein interaction using the fact that a protein bound to DNA will often protect that DNA from enzymatic cleavage. This makes it possible to locate a protein binding site on a particular DNA molecule.

  4. Diagnostic microbiology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Diagnostic_Microbiology

    DNase agar is used to test whether a microbe can produce the exoenzyme deoxyribonuclease (DNase), which hydrolyzes DNA. Methyl green is used as an indicator in the growth medium because it is a cation that provides an opaqueness to a medium with the presence of negatively charged DNA strands. When DNA is cleaved, the media becomes clear ...

  5. Micrococcal nuclease - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Micrococcal_nuclease

    Micrococcal nuclease (EC 3.1.31.1, S7 Nuclease, MNase, spleen endonuclease, thermonuclease, nuclease T, micrococcal endonuclease, nuclease T', staphylococcal nuclease, spleen phosphodiesterase, Staphylococcus aureus nuclease, Staphylococcus aureus nuclease B, ribonucleate (deoxynucleate) 3'-nucleotidohydrolase) is an endo-exonuclease that preferentially digests single-stranded nucleic acids.

  6. DNA footprinting - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DNA_footprinting

    In vivo footprinting is a technique used to analyze the protein-DNA interactions that are occurring in a cell at a given time point. [5] [9] DNase I can be used as a cleavage agent if the cellular membrane has been permeabilized. However the most common cleavage agent used is UV irradiation because it penetrates the cell membrane without ...

  7. Deoxyribonuclease I - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deoxyribonuclease_I

    Deoxyribonuclease I (usually called DNase I), is an endonuclease of the DNase family coded by the human gene DNASE1. [5] DNase I is a nuclease that cleaves DNA preferentially at phosphodiester linkages adjacent to a pyrimidine nucleotide, yielding 5'-phosphate-terminated polynucleotides with a free hydroxyl group on position 3', on average producing tetranucleotides.

  8. MNase-seq - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MNase-seq

    At sufficient concentrations, DNase I is capable of digesting nucleosome-bound DNA to 10bp, whereas micrococcal nuclease cannot. [17] Additionally, DNase-seq is used to identify DHSs, which are regions of DNA that are hypersensitive to DNase treatment and are often indicative of regulatory regions (e.g. promoters or enhancers). [57]

  9. Deoxyribonuclease II - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deoxyribonuclease_II

    Deoxyribonuclease II (EC 3.1.22.1, DNase II, pancreatic DNase II, deoxyribonucleate 3'-nucleotidohydrolase, pancreatic DNase II, acid deoxyribonuclease, acid DNase) is an endonuclease that hydrolyzes phosphodiester linkages of deoxyribonucleotide in native and denatured DNA, yielding products with 3'-phosphates and 5'-hydroxyl ends, which occurs as a result of single-strand cleaving mechanism. [1]