OurBigBook About$ Donate
 Sign in+ Sign up
by Ciro Santilli (@cirosantilli, 37)

Restriction enzyme

 ... Biology Level of organization of bodies Molecular biology Protein Type of protein Enzyme
 1 By others on same topic  0 Discussions  Updated 2025-06-17  +Created 1970-01-01  See my version

 Ancestors (9)

  1. Enzyme
  2. Type of protein
  3. Protein
  4. Molecular biology
  5. Level of organization of bodies
  6. Biology
  7. Natural science
  8. Science
  9.  Home

 Incoming links (1)

  • 100 Greatest Discoveries by the Discovery Channel (2004-2005)

 View article source

 Discussion (0)

+ New discussion

There are no discussions about this article yet.

 Articles by others on the same topic (1)

Restriction enzyme by Wikipedia Bot 0  1970-01-01
 View more
Restriction enzymes, also known as restriction endonucleases, are proteins that act as molecular scissors, cutting DNA at specific sequences called restriction sites. These enzymes are naturally produced by bacteria as a defense mechanism against invading viruses (bacteriophages) by recognizing and cutting foreign DNA while leaving their own DNA unharmed, usually through methylation. Each restriction enzyme has a specific recognition sequence, typically 4 to 8 base pairs long, which it scans for in the DNA molecule.
 Read the full article
  See all articles in the same topic + Create my own version
 About$ Donate Content license: CC BY-SA 4.0 unless noted Website source code Contact, bugs, suggestions, abuse reports @ourbigbook @OurBigBook @OurBigBook