Q.12 Which of the following activity is associated with Klenow fragment? (A) 5′-3′ exonuclease activity (B) 5′-3′ endonuclease activity (C) Polymerase activity (D) 3′-5′ endonuclease activity

Q.12 Which of the following activity is associated with Klenow fragment?
(A)
53 exonuclease activity
(B)
53 endonuclease activity
(C)
Polymerase activity
(D)
3′5′ endonuclease activity

Answer: (C) Polymerase activity

The Klenow fragment retains 5’→3′ polymerase activity along with 3’→5′ exonuclease activity, making option (C) correct for this CSIR NET Life Sciences question.

Option Analysis

Option (A) 5′-3′ exonuclease activity: This activity removes nucleotides from the 5′ end and is present in full DNA polymerase I but absent in the Klenow fragment due to proteolytic cleavage by subtilisin.

Option (B) 5′-3′ endonuclease activity: Endonucleases cleave internal phosphodiester bonds; neither DNA polymerase I nor Klenow fragment possesses this activity.

Option (C) Polymerase activity: Correct. Klenow fragment retains 5’→3′ polymerase activity for DNA synthesis, filling 5′ overhangs, and probe labeling.

Option (D) 3′-5′ endonuclease activity: No endonuclease activity exists; the 3’→5′ function in Klenow is exonuclease for proofreading mismatched bases from the 3′ end.

Klenow Fragment Overview

Klenow fragment derives from E. coli DNA polymerase I after subtilisin digestion, producing a large ~68 kDa fragment and a small one with 5’→3′ exonuclease. It lacks 5’→3′ exonuclease but keeps polymerase for strand extension and 3’→5′ exonuclease for error correction.

The Klenow fragment represents a key tool in molecular biology, derived from E. coli DNA polymerase I, retaining essential Klenow fragment activities like polymerase for DNA synthesis while lacking disruptive 5’→3′ exonuclease. For CSIR NET aspirants, understanding these Klenow fragment activities clarifies replication, repair, and biotech applications.

Core Klenow Fragment Activities

Klenow fragment excels in:

  • 5’→3′ Polymerase Activity: Synthesizes DNA from primers, fills 5′ overhangs to create blunt ends.

  • 3’→5′ Exonuclease Activity: Proofreads by excising mismatched 3′ nucleotides.

  • Lacks 5’→3′ Exonuclease: Prevents unwanted 5′ end degradation, ideal for labeling and PCR precursors.

Comparison: Klenow vs. Full DNA Polymerase I

Feature Klenow Fragment DNA Polymerase I
5’→3′ Polymerase Yes  Yes
3’→5′ Exonuclease Yes  Yes
5’→3′ Exonuclease No  Yes
Applications Blunt ending, probes  Primer removal 

CSIR NET Relevance

In exams, questions test Klenow fragment activities like this MCQ, emphasizing polymerase retention over exonucleases. Variants like exo-Klenow (no 3’→5′ exo) suit labeling without degradation.

Practical Uses

  • Blunt-end cloning by filling 5′ overhangs or resecting 3′ overhangs.

  • Early DNA sequencing and probe synthesis before Taq dominance.

  • Second-strand cDNA synthesis in biotech protocols.

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