Skip to Content
Merck
All Photos(1)

Key Documents

UDGHL-RO

Roche

Uracil-DNA Glycosylase, heat-labile

recombinant from marine bacterium BMTU 3346

Synonym(s):

PCR, UDG

Sign Into View Organizational & Contract Pricing


About This Item

Enzyme Commission number:
UNSPSC Code:
41106300

biological source

bacterial (marine bacterium BMTU 3346)

Quality Level

recombinant

expressed in E. coli

form

solution

packaging

pkg of 100 U (11775367001)
pkg of 500 U (11775375001)

manufacturer/tradename

Roche

concentration

1000 U/mL

technique(s)

activity assay: suitable

color

colorless

optimum pH

8.3-8.9

solubility

water: soluble

suitability

suitable for enzyme test

application(s)

life science and biopharma

foreign activity

DNA decontamination:, present ( >= 10 e5 copies )
RNases with MS- II- RNA ≤10 units, none detected
Unspec.nucleases w. lambda-DNA 20 units, none detected
Unspec.nucleases w.M13mp9ss-DNA ≤20 units, none detected
Unspec.nucleases w.pBR 322-DNA ≤20 units, none detected

storage temp.

−20°C

Related Categories

General description

Uracil-DNA Glycosylase, heat-labile contains the equally named enzyme found in the marine bacterium BMTU 3346. Like the UNG from E. coli it hydrolyzes uracil-glycosidic bonds in single- or double-stranded DNA, excising uracil and creating alkali-sensitive abasic sites in the DNA. These abasic sites can be hydrolyzed by endonuclease, heat, or alkali treatment. Depending on how the DNA is prepared, Uracil-DNA Glycosylase can be used to achieve general, site-specific, or strand-specific U-DNA cleavage. This enzyme shows lower thermostability and is therefore easier to inactivate.

Enzyme Characteristics
The BMTU 3346 enzyme is inactivated more quickly (2 minutes at +95°C) than the corresponding enzyme from E. coli (10 minutes at +95°C). It has also been reported that UNG from E. coli remains partially active, leading to the degradation of the dU-containing PCR product. In contrast, the heat-labile UNG does not degrade dU-PCR products within at least several hours of incubation at +2 to +8°C. Therefore, it is not necessary to freeze the PCR product immediately after amplification or to hold the reaction mixture at -70°C.

Specificity

  • Uracil-DNA glycosylase hydrolyzes uracil-glycosidic bonds at U-DNA sites in single- and doublestranded DNA, excising uracil and creating alkali sensitive abasic sites in the DNA.
  • The enzyme is active on both single-stranded DNA and double-standed DNA.
  • Uracil-DNA glycosylase is inactive on RNA and native, uracil-free DNA.
  • Since uracil-DNA glycosylase has no metal ion requirements, it is fully active in the presence of EDTA.

Heat inactivation: 95 °C for 2 min

Application

Uracil-DNA glycosylase can be used to cleave DNA at any site where a deoxyuridylate residue has been incorporated. Because of the heat-lability of Uracil-DNA Glycosylase, heat labile the main application of this enzyme is the prevention of carryover contamination in PCR. In contrast to the enzyme from E.coli; using this preparation of UNG it is not necessary to freeze the PCR product immediately after amplification or to hold the reaction mixture at +70 °C.

Important Note
: For highly sensitive techniques like real-time PCR we recommend our LightCycler® Uracil-DNA Glycosylase which is optimized for this application.

Features and Benefits

  • Prevent carryover contamination in PCR.
  • Increase the efficiency of site-directed mutagenesis procedures.
  • Label oligonucleotide probes.
  • Perform faster inactivation than the corresponding enzyme from E. coli due to the lower thermostability of the enzyme.
  • Obtain no degradation of dU-PCR products within at least several hours of incubation at +2 to +8°C.

Contents
The enzyme is supplied as 1 U/μl solution in storage buffer.

Quality

Function Test: Carryover prevention activity is assayed by adding approximately 105 dU that contains templates prior to the amplification reaction. After UNG treatment, no amplification products could be detected.
The enzyme does not contain any contaminating exo- or endonucleases and is free from RNase activity, according to the current quality control procedures.

Unit Definition

One unit is defined as the amount of Uracil-DNA Glycosylase required to completely degrade 1 μg purified single-stranded uracil-containing DNA (bacteriophage M13, grown in E. coli CJ236 dut-ung-) at +37 °C in 60 minutes.
One Lindahl unit is defined as the amount of enzyme necessary to release 1 mol uracil at +37 °C in 1 minute. One Lindahl unit is comparable to 520 000 units based on our unit definition.

Volume Activity: 1 U/μl

Other Notes

For general laboratory use.

Legal Information

LightCycler is a registered trademark of Roche

Hazard Statements

Precautionary Statements

Hazard Classifications

Aquatic Chronic 3

Storage Class Code

12 - Non Combustible Liquids

WGK

WGK 2

Flash Point(F)

does not flash

Flash Point(C)

does not flash


Regulatory Listings

Regulatory Listings are mainly provided for chemical products. Only limited information can be provided here for non-chemical products. No entry means none of the components are listed. It is the user’s obligation to ensure the safe and legal use of the product.

EU REACH SVHC Candidate List

CAS No.

EU REACH Annex XVII (Restriction List)

CAS No.

EU REACH Annex XIV (Authorisation List)

CAS No.

Certificates of Analysis (COA)

Search for Certificates of Analysis (COA) by entering the products Lot/Batch Number. Lot and Batch Numbers can be found on a product’s label following the words ‘Lot’ or ‘Batch’.

Already Own This Product?

Find documentation for the products that you have recently purchased in the Document Library.

Visit the Document Library

Customers Also Viewed

Slide 1 of 2

1 of 2

Julian W Tang et al.
Journal of medical virology, 82(11), 1911-1916 (2010-09-28)
Viral loads of herpes simplex virus (HSV) are not monitored usually for the effective clinical management of HSV-related diseases. However, recently, there has been more interest about the typical HSV levels in clinical specimens, and how such data may improve

Articles

DNA damage and repair mechanism is vital for maintaining DNA integrity. Damage to cellular DNA is involved in mutagenesis, the development of cancer among others.

Our team of scientists has experience in all areas of research including Life Science, Material Science, Chemical Synthesis, Chromatography, Analytical and many others.

Contact Technical Service