In molecular biology,
ligation is the joining of two nucleic acid fragments through the action of an enzyme. It is an essential laboratory procedure in the
molecular cloning of DNA whereby DNA fragments are joined together to create
recombinant DNA molecules, such as when a foreign DNA fragment is inserted into a
plasmid. The ends of DNA fragments are joined together by the formation of phosphodiester bonds between the 3'-hydroxyl of one DNA terminus with the 5'-phosphoryl of another. RNA may also be ligated similarly. A co-factor is generally involved in the reaction, and this is usually ATP or NAD
+.