Publication | Open Access
Size and physical map of the chromosome of Haemophilus influenzae
78
Citations
16
References
1989
Year
Reverse GeneticsCytogeneticsGeneticsDna AnalysisMolecular BiologyMolecular GeneticsGenomicsH. Influenzae ChromosomeDna SequencingMolecular Biological MethodDna ReplicationRestriction EnzymesBiologyNatural SciencesPathogenesisLambda Dna LadderHaemophilus InfluenzaeChromosome BiologyMicrobiologyMedicine
A variation of pulse-field electrophoresis, field-inversion gel electrophoresis, was used to determine the size and physical map of the chromosome of Haemophilus influenzae. The DNA of H. influenzae had a low G + C content (39%) and no restriction sites for the enzymes NotI or SfiI. However, a number of restriction enzymes (SmaI, ApaI, NaeI, and SacII) that recognized 6-base-pair sequences containing only G and C nucleotides were found to generate a reasonable number of DNA fragments that were separable in agarose gels by field-inversion gel electrophoresis. The sizes of the DNA fragments were calibrated with a lambda DNA ladder and lambda DNA restriction fragments. The sum of fragment sizes obtained with restriction digests yielded a value for the chromosome of 1,980 kilobase pairs. Hybridization of a labeled fragment with two or more fragments from a digest with a different restriction enzyme provided the information needed to construct a circular map of the H. influenzae chromosome.
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