In this method, the nuclease BAL 31 is used to make uni- or bidirectional deletions in a segment of cloned DNA. BAL 31 is a complex enzyme and tends to digest a population of double-stranded DNA targets in an asynchronous fashion, Deletions created by BAL 31 are therefore far more heterogeneous in size than those created by processive enzymes such as exonuclease III. - [Read Generation of Bidirectional Sets of Deletion Mutants by Digestion with BAL 31 Nuclease Protocol]
Exponentially growing cells are asynchronous with respect to the cell cycle stage. Detection of cell cycle-related events is improved by enriching the culture for cells at the stage during which the particular event occurs. Methods for synchronizing cells are provided here, including those based on morphological features of the cell. - [Read Methods for Synchronizing Cells at Specific Stages of the Cell Cycle]
Feeding euplotids with algae can lead to asynchronous cell starvation and vastly different cell sizes within a culture. Asynchronous starvation also leads to different levels of mating competence. Furthermore, algal pigment remnants can interfere with many applications (e.g., fluorescence microscopy). - [Read Refeeding Marine Euplotids with Bacteria Protocol]