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Metagenomic discovery and characterisation of restriction endonuclease from Kogelberg Biosphere ReserveMtimka, Sibongile 05 1900 (has links)
Restriction endonucleases are a group of enzymes that cleave DNA at or around specific sequences, which are typically palindromic. A fosmid library was constructed from a metagenome isolated from soil from the Kogelberg Nature Reserve, Western Cape and was functionally screened for restriction endonucleases. Next-generation (NGS) Illumina sequencing technology was used to identify putative endonucleases. The sequence data generated was assembled and analysed using CLC Bio Genomics Workbench and bioinformatics tools (NCBI BLAST, REBASE and MG-RAST). Using these tools, genes encoding restriction-modification systems and endonuclease homologues were discovered. Three genes were identified and were recombinantly produced in Rosetta™ (DE3) pLysS and purified with IMAC using Ni-TED resin and subsequently characterised. These three genes were selected based on the identity percentage when compared to sequences on the NCBI database. Production of Endo8 was scaled up using 2 l fermenter and the purification done using ÄKTA Avant 150 FPLC using a HiScale 50 column packed with Ni-TED resin and the total amount of protein achieved was 58.82 mg.g-1. The productivity achieved at 17 hours (8 h harvest) was 2-fold greater than at 12 hours. Endonuclease activity of endo8 and endo52 was tested, both exhibited strong non-specific activity at 37 °C with an incubation period of 30 min. This work demonstrates that environmental soil samples are a valuable source for discovery of novel enzymes and also the utility of functional metagenomics to discover and purify these enzymes. These endonucleases may contribute to the next generation of reagent enzymes for molecular biology research. / Chemistry / M. Sc. (Life Sciences)
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