Zinc-fingers: Difference between revisions
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Zinc Finger Nucleases (ZFNs) were the first widely used programmable DNA binding protein system. ZFNs are comprised of a chain of zinc finger proteins fused to a bacterial nuclease to produce a system capable of making site-specific double stranded DNA breaks to enable gene edits. The zinc finger proteins provide site specific targeting as they each recognize a 3–4 base pair DNA sequence. | ==Overview== | ||
Zinc Finger Nucleases (ZFNs) were the first widely used programmable DNA binding protein system. ZFNs are comprised of a chain of zinc finger proteins fused to a bacterial nuclease to produce a system capable of making site-specific double stranded DNA breaks to enable gene edits. The zinc finger proteins provide site specific DNA targeting as they each recognize a 3–4 base pair DNA sequence. | |||
In ZFNs, a chain of zinc finger proteins are utilized to recognize a longer, more specific locus within the genome. The nuclease commonly used in ZFN technology, fused to this chain of zinc finger proteins, is FokI, which must dimerize in order to introduce a DSB. Therefore a pair of ZFNs are used together to target and cut the DNA. | |||
==Overview Figure== | |||
==Details== | |||
Latest revision as of 20:41, 9 September 2021
Overview
Zinc Finger Nucleases (ZFNs) were the first widely used programmable DNA binding protein system. ZFNs are comprised of a chain of zinc finger proteins fused to a bacterial nuclease to produce a system capable of making site-specific double stranded DNA breaks to enable gene edits. The zinc finger proteins provide site specific DNA targeting as they each recognize a 3–4 base pair DNA sequence.
In ZFNs, a chain of zinc finger proteins are utilized to recognize a longer, more specific locus within the genome. The nuclease commonly used in ZFN technology, fused to this chain of zinc finger proteins, is FokI, which must dimerize in order to introduce a DSB. Therefore a pair of ZFNs are used together to target and cut the DNA.