MICB 325 Lecture Notes - Lecture 8: Restriction Enzyme, Wild Type, Plasmid

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23 Feb 2020
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Complementation of a mutant is the process of adding back the wild type gene to restore a wild type (normal) phenotype. If the complementation does restore the wildtype phenotype you can conclude that the mutation caused the mutant phenotype. If not, there is likely an additional mutation elsewhere that you did not find which is responsible for the mutant phenotype (for example in a section of repetitive dna which may be hard to get the correct sequence of). Many bacteria are capable of harboring (typically small) circular pieces of dna in addition to their chromosomes called plasmids. In fact, many bacteria are able to take up these plasmids. As you may recall, horizontal gene transfer has given bacteria the ability to evolve rapidly by taking up foreign dna through methods such as transformation and conjugation. We can put the wild type copy of a gene in a plasmid to see if the wildtype phenotype is restored.

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