The cloning of genes, gene fragments and other DNA sequences is a fundamental part of
molecular biology. To study the function of a particular DNA sequence, you must be able
to manipulate that sequence. There are two main ways to achieve this: the polymerase
chain reaction (PCR) and the more traditional use of restriction enzymes and modifying
enzymes to “cut and paste” the desired DNA fragments into cloning vectors, which can
then be replicated using live cells, most commonly E. coli. The use
of PCR has an advantage in that it gives you the option to re-amplify the target DNA
each time your DNA supplies dwindle without ligation into a vector or transformation
into E. coli. Alternatively, PCR products can be ligated into a
suitable vector, which can then be transformed into and replicated by E.
coli. This chapter covers the basics of cloning using PCR and restriction
enzymes, including DNA cleanup prior to ligation, ligation, transformation and screening
to identify recombinant clones.
The PCR process is a useful tool to quickly and easily amplify the desired sequences.
With the successful sequencing of whole and partial genomes of organisms across all
biological kingdoms, DNA cloning by PCR is an easily attainable option. Public DNA
databases allow researchers to design primers to amplify their DNA fragment of interest
directly from the genomic DNA of the desired organism. With the simple addition of a
reverse transcription step prior to PCR, RNA sequences can be converted to cDNA, which
can then be cloned into a suitable vector. For additional information about
amplification of DNA and RNA sequences using PCR, see the Protocols and
Applications Guide chapter on PCR
Applications.
PCR products generated using a nonproofreading DNA polymerase such as
Taq DNA polymerase, which lacks 3´→5´ exonuclease
activity, have a single template-independent nucleotide at the 3´ end of the DNA
strand (Clark, 1988; Newton and Graham, 1994). This single-nucleotide overhang, which is
most commonly an A residue, allows hybridization with and cloning into T vectors, which
have a complementary 3´ single T overhang. PCR products generated using a proofreading
DNA polymerase, such as Pfu DNA polymerase, have blunt ends and
must be cloned into a blunt-ended vector or need a single 3´A overhang added to ligate
into a T vector (Knoche and Kephart, 1999).
If PCR amplification of the desired DNA fragment is not possible or desirable,
restriction enzyme digestion of the target DNA can be employed. The desired fragment may
need to be separated from other DNA fragments in the reaction, so the size of the
desired DNA fragment should be known. Once isolated, the fragment is cloned into a
vector with compatible ends. If the vector ends are capable of religating (e.g., the
vector has blunt ends or is cut with a single restriction enzyme), the vector is often
treated with alkaline phosphatase to discourage recircularization and maximize ligation
between the insert and vector.
Following transformation into E. coli, the resulting bacterial
colonies are screened by PCR for the correct recombinant vector using primers to amplify
the insert. Alternatively, the recombinant vector can be identified by performing a
restriction enzyme digestion to determine the presence of the correct insert. Screening
is often simplified by using vectors that contain an antibiotic-resistance gene, so
cells containing the vector will survive on medium supplemented with the appropriate
antibiotic. Screening can be further simplified by choosing a vector and E.
coli strain that are compatible with blue/white screening, which takes
advantage of intracistronic α-complementation to regenerate β-galactosidase activity.
Many E. coli strains used for cloning and propagation of plasmids
contain a chromosomal deletion of the lac operon but carry an F´
episome that provides the remaining coding sequence of the lacZ
gene. The functional lacZ gene product, β-galactosidase, is
produced when the lacZ coding information missing on the F´ episome
is provided by the information contained in the plasmid. This activity is detected by
plating bacteria transformed by plasmids on plates containing isopropyl
β-D-thiogalactopyranoside (IPTG; an inducer of the
lac promoter) and
5-bromo-4-chloro-3-indolyl-β-D-galactoside (X-Gal; a dye that
produces a blue color when hydrolyzed by β-galactosidase). When the reading frame of the
α peptide is disrupted by insertion of a foreign DNA fragment or deletion of
vector sequences, α-complementation does not occur, and the bacterial colonies remain
white or occasionally light blue.
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The use of amplification enzymes is the first step in cloning by PCR. Most people
use PCR for cloning, taking advantage of the single nucleotide A overhang left after
amplification with a nonproofreading DNA polymerase to ligate the amplimer to a
vector containing T overhangs. However, products will be blunt-ended if the DNA
polymerase has 3′→5′ exonuclease activity, also known as
proofreading activity. Alternatively, PCR primers can add sequences for restriction
enzyme sites, and these resulting products can be digested and ligated into a vector
with compatible ends. Promega provides several thermostable DNA polymerases. These
include the GoTaq® Amplification Family,
Tfl DNA polymerase and proofreading polymerases. A detailed
listing of the various enzymes for use in PCR can be found in the Protocol
and Applications Guide chapter on PCR
Applications, in the section "Thermostable DNA Polymerases". The
GoTaq® Amplification Family of products is highlighted
in the following section.
GoTaq® Amplification Family
GoTaq® DNA Polymerase is available in various
formulations to suit your needs: the standard GoTaq®
DNA Polymerase, which is supplied with 1.5mM MgCl2 in the
1X reaction buffer; GoTaq® Flexi DNA Polymerase, which
allows a range of MgCl2 to be added for PCR; and
GoTaq® Green Master Mix, which is a premixed,
ready-to-use solution containing GoTaq® DNA Polymerase,
dNTPs, MgCl2 and reaction buffers at optimal concentrations
for efficient amplification of DNA templates by PCR. All
GoTaq® products contain Taq DNA
polymerase in a proprietary formulation that offer enhanced amplification over
conventional Taq DNA polymerase. Each member of the
GoTaq® family has a reaction buffer that contains
two dyes (a blue dye and a yellow dye) that separate during electrophoresis to
show migration progress as well as a compound that increases sample density.
Samples can be loaded directly onto gels without the need to add a separate
loading dye. If the dyes interfere with your downstream applications,
GoTaq® DNA Polymerases are supplied with a 5X
Colorless Reaction Buffer. Alternatively, the PCR Master Mix offers a ready-to-use
formulation without any dyes. Reaction products generated with these systems
contain A overhangs and are ready for T-vector cloning.
Additional Resources for GoTaq® DNA Polymerase
Promega Publications
PN083
Introducing GoTaq® DNA Polymerase:
Improved amplification with a choice of buffers
Citations
Theodoropoulos, G.
et al. (2006) Determination of prevalence and risk factors of infection with
Babesia in small ruminants from Greece by
polymerase chain reaction amplification.
Vet. Parasitol. 135, 99–104.
Researchers used GoTaq® DNA Polymerase
to test sheep and goat blood samples for the presence of
Babesia DNA. Primers were designed around the
18S rRNA sequence of Babesia sp. PCR was
performed in a 50µl reaction volume using 1 unit of
GoTaq® DNA Polymerase. Ten microliters
of each amplification reaction were loaded on gels and subjected to
electrophoresis.
PubMed Number:
16139956
Weinberg, J.B.
et al. (2005) Acute respiratory infection with mouse adenovirus type 1.
Virology 340, 245–54.
Mouse adenovirus type 1 (MAV-1) was detected in DNA extracted from
the lungs of mice by PCR amplification of the E1A region of MAV-1. For
these assays, 80ng of total DNA was added to a 20µl PCR reaction
containing 0.5 units of GoTaq® DNA
Polymerase, 4µl of 5X GoTaq® Buffer, dNTPs
and primers for MAV-1 E1A. The amplified products were separated on a
1.8% agarose gel and stained with ethidium bromide.
PubMed Number:
16054189
Additional Resources for GoTaq® Flexi DNA
Polymerase
Promega Publications
PN089
GoTaq® Flexi DNA Polymerase: Robust
performance with magnesium optimization
Additional Resources for GoTaq® Green Master Mix
Promega Publications
eNotes
Activity of Promega Restriction Enzymes in
GoTaq® Green Master Mix and PCR Master
Mix
eNotes
Analyses of gene disruption by whole-cell PCR using the
GoTaq® Green Master Mix
PN091
GoTaq® Green Master Mix: From
amplification to analysis
PN101
Recombinant clone screening using the
GoTaq® Hot Start Green Master Mix
Citations
Rendón, M.A.
et al. (2007) Commensal and pathogenic
Escherichia coli use a
common pilus adherence factor for epithelial cell colonization.
Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA. 104, 10637–42.
The authors identified an adherence factor of enterohemorrhagic
E. coli that is involved in colonization of
cultured epithelial cells. This factor, named E.
coli common pilus (ECP), is encoded by the ecpA gene, which
is present 96% of E. coli strains tested, as determined by PCR. The
remaining 4% of the strains were deficient in the ECP operon, as
determined by multiplex PCR amplification of
ecpR, ecpA,
ecpB and ecpC sequences. PCR
were performed using GoTaq® Green Master
Mix. An ecpA deletion mutant exhibited impaired adherence compared to
the wildtype E. coli strain. Complementation of
the mutant strain with the plasmid pMR13, the
pGEM®-T Vector containing the
ecpA gene, restored the strain's ability to
adhere to epithelial cells.
PubMed Number:
17563352
Song, J.H.
et al. (2006) Human astrocytes are resistant to Fas ligand and tumor necrosis
factor-related apoptosis-inducing ligand-induced apoptosis.
J. Neurosci. 26, 3299–308.
Total RNA was extracted from human astrocytes and control A549
cells. First strand cDNA was synthesized from 3μg of total RNA using
random hexamers. PCR was performed on the cDNA samples using primers
for DR4, DR5 and GAPDH with GoTaq® Green
Master Mix. The PCR products were analyzed on a 1.5% agarose gel and
stained with ethidium bromide.
PubMed Number:
16554480
Additional Resources for PCR Master Mix
Promega Publications
eNotes
Activity of Promega Restriction Enzymes in
GoTaq® Green Master Mix and PCR Master
Mix
PN078
Performance advantages designed into Promega's PCR Master Mix
T vectors are a specific type of cloning vector that get their name from the T
overhangs added to a linearized plasmid. These vectors take advantage of the A
overhangs on PCR products after amplification with Taq DNA
polymerase by providing compatible ends for ligation (Mezei and Storts, 1994; Robles
and Doers, 1994). There are three different T-cloning vectors from Promega: two are
basic cloning vectors, and the third is a mammalian expression vector.
pGEM®-T and pGEM®-T Easy
Vector Systems
The pGEM®-T (Cat.# A3600,
A3610) and pGEM®-T Easy Vector Systems
(Cat.# A1360, A1380) are convenient systems for
the cloning of PCR products. The vectors are prepared by cutting with a
blunt-ended restriction endonuclease and adding a 3´terminal thymidine to both
ends (Figures 13.1 and 13.2). These single 3´ T overhangs at the insertion site
greatly improve the efficiency of ligation of a PCR product into the plasmids by
preventing recircularization of the vector and providing a compatible overhang for
PCR products with 5′ A overhangs.
The high-copy-number pGEM®-T and
pGEM®-T Easy Vectors contain T7 and SP6 RNA polymerase
promoters flanking a multiple cloning region within the coding region for the
α-peptide of β-galactosidase. Insertional inactivation of the α-peptide allows
recombinant clones to be directly identified by color screening on indicator
plates containing X-Gal (Cat.# V3941) and IPTG
(Cat.# V3955). Both the
pGEM®-T and pGEM®-T Easy
Vectors contain numerous restriction sites within the multiple cloning region. The
pGEM®-T Easy Vector multiple cloning region is
flanked by recognition sites for the restriction enzymes EcoRI, BstZI and NotI,
thus providing three single-enzyme digestions for release of the insert. The
pGEM®-T Vector cloning region is flanked by
recognition sites for the enzyme BstZI. Alternatively, a double-digestion may be
used to release the insert from either vector.
The pGEM®-T and pGEM®-T
Easy Vectors also contain the origin of replication of the filamentous phage f1
for the preparation of single-stranded DNA (ssDNA). Both
pGEM®-T vector systems include a 2X Rapid Ligation
Buffer for ligation of PCR products, which requires only a 1-hour incubation at
room temperature. The incubation period may be extended to increase the number of
colonies after transformation. Generally, an overnight incubation at 4°C will
produce the maximum number of transformants.
Inserts of several kilobases have been successfully cloned into the
pGEM®-T and pGEM®-T Easy
Vectors (D’Avino et al. 2004). However, as the insert
gets larger, the ratio of vector to insert may need to be optimized further to
maximize ligation efficiency (see Ligation and
Transformation in the section "Vector:Insert Ratio").
One of the disadvantages of PCR cloning into a T vector is that the insert can
be cloned in either direction. Analysis of recombinant vectors by PCR or
restriction enzyme digestion can be used to determine not only the success of
cloning, but in which direction the insert was cloned. To verify the direction of
the insert, amplify recombinant plasmids using one of the gene specific PCR
primers and each of the phage promoter primers, which are present on the
pGEM®-T Vector (Knoche and Kephart, 1999). The
correct orientation is important for transcription or translation or both.
Additional Resources for the pGEM®-T and
pGEM®-T Easy Vector Systems
Technical Bulletins and Manuals
TM042
pGEM®-T and
pGEM®-T Easy Vector Systems Technical
Bulletin
Promega Publications
eNotes
pGEM®-T Easy Vector System is an easy tool
for preparing gel shift probes
eNotes
Cloning differential display-PCR products with
pGEM®-T Easy Vector System
PN082
Technically Speaking: T-vector cloning
PN073
Constructing genomic libraries using the
pGEM®-T Vector
PN071
Cloning blunt-end Pfu DNA Polymerase-generated
PCR fragments into pGEM®-T Vector
Systems
PN065
Stability of pGEM®-T Vectors
PN071
Cloning Blunt-End Pfu DNA Polymerase-Generated PCR Fragments into pGEM®-T Vector Systems
PN061
Amplification of flanking regions: New applications and performance
optimization of single specific primer PCR and T-vector cloning
Online Tools
pGEM®-T Vector sequence
Citations
Renaud, S.
et al. (2007) Dual role of DNA methylation inside and outside of CTCF-binding
regions in the transcriptional regulation of the telomerase hTERT gene.
Nucleic Acids Res. 35, 1245–56.
Telomeres shorten by 50–100 bases with each cell division, making
the telomere a "mitotic counter" that can limit cellular lifespan.
Telomerase is a two-component protein consisting of a reverse
transcriptase (hTERT) bound to its own RNA template that can act to
maintain telomere length in dividing cells. This paper investigated
the role of methylation of the hTERT promoter and the transcription
factor CTCF in regulation of telomerase activity. LacZ reporter
plasmids driven by the hTERT minimal promoter were transiently
transfected into HeLa cells, and reporter assays were performed on
lysate generated using Passive Lysis Buffer. The hTERT minimal
promoter did not show activity if all of the CpG sites were
methylated. The promoter and first exon of hTERT were amplified using
PCR Master Mix from sodium bisulfite-treated genomic DNA isolated from
telomerase-positive cell lines and tissues. The resulting fragments
were cloned using the pGEM®-T Vector System
II. For the methylation cassette assay, methylated and unmethylated
fragments were cloned into a methylated or unmethylated vector using
the LigaFast™ Rapid DNA Ligation System. The authors conclude that
methylation plays a dual role in regulating hTERT expression. CTCF
will bind to the first exon of hTERT when the hTERT CpG island is not
methylated, resulting in downregulation of hTERT expression.
PubMed Number:
17267411
Wu, S.
et al. (2006) Reversal of the malignant phenotype of cervical cancer CaSki cells
through adeno-associated virus-mediated delivery of HPV16 E7 antisense
RNA.
Cancer Res. 12, 2032–7.
The coding sequence of the Human Papilloma Virus (HPV16) E7
oncogene was isolated after purification of total RNA from CaSki
cells, RT-PCR, subsequent PCR and cloning into the
pGEM®-T Easy Vector. To test the
effectiveness of antisense HPV16 E7 therapy against cervical cancer,
an adeno-associated virus vector was constructed using this coding
sequence and used to transfer the antisense construct of the E7 coding
sequence into CaSki cervical cancer cells.
PubMed Number:
16609012
pTARGET™ Mammalian Expression Vector System
The pTARGET™ Mammalian Expression Vector System
(Cat.# A1410) is a convenient system to clone
PCR products and express cloned PCR products in mammalian cells. As with the
pGEM®-T and pGEM®-T Easy
Vector Systems, the pTARGET™ Vector is supplied already
linearized with single T overhangs (Figure 13.3). These single 3´ T overhangs at
the insertion site greatly improve the efficiency of ligation of a PCR product
into the plasmid. The pTARGET™ Vector also contains a
modified version of the coding sequence of the α peptide of β-galactosidase, which
allows recombinants to be selected using blue/white screening.
The pTARGET™ Vector carries the human cytomegalovirus
(CMV) immediate-early enhancer/promoter region to promote constitutive expression
of cloned DNA inserts in mammalian cells. This vector also contains the neomycin
phosphotransferase gene, a selectable marker for mammalian cells. The
pTARGET™ Vector can be used for transient expression or
for stable expression by selecting transfected cells with the antibiotic G-418.
Like the pGEM®-T or pGEM®-T
Easy Vectors, inserts of several kilobases can be cloned in and expressed from the
pTARGET™ Vector (Sakakida et al.
2005; Le Gall et al. 2003).
Additional Resources for the pTARGET™ Mammalian
Expression Vector System
Technical Bulletins and Manuals
TM044
pTARGET™ Mammalian Expression Vector System
Technical Manual
Promega Publications
PN082
Technically Speaking: T-vector cloning
PN058
pTARGET™ Vector: A new mammalian expression
T-vector
Online Tools
pTARGET™ Mammalian Expression Vector
sequence
Citations
Treeck, O.
et al. (2007) Novel estrogen receptor beta transcript variants identified in human
breast cancer cells affect cell growth and apoptosis of COS-1 cells.
Mol. Cell. Endocrinol. 264, 50–60.
This study identified two novel transcript variants of the estrogen
receptor ERβ that were expressed in the ERα-negative breast cancer
cell line MDA-MD-231. These variants were identified after
amplification of ERβ transcripts from the breast cancer cell line by
RT-PCR. The amplification products were then excised from gels and
subcloned into the pTARGET™ Mammalian
Expression Vector prior to sequencing. COS1 cells, which do not
express the estrogen receptor, were then stably transfected with
full-length ERβ or one of the splice variants, and the effects on cell
proliferation, apoptosis and estrogen response were evaluated. In COS1
cells expressing either ERβ or the transcript variants, cell
proliferation decreased and basal apoptosis (caspase-3/7 activity)
increased, compared to cells transfected with vector alone. Exposure
to therapeutic doses of tamoxifen induced apoptosis in cells
expressing the full-length ERβ but not in cells expressing either of
the variant isoforms.
PubMed Number:
17095148
Guyonnet-Duperat, V.
et al. (2006) Functional implication of an ARG307GLY substitution in corticosteroid
binding globulin, a candidate gene for a QTL associated with cortisol
variability and obesity.
Genetics 173, 2143–9.
In this study, the effects of amino acid substitutions in porcine
corticosteroid-binding globulin gene (Cbg) were
tested on CBG binding and affinity. Cbg cDNA was
obtained by reverse transcribing pig liver total RNA using M-MLV
Reverse Transcriptase followed by PCR. The 1257bp PCR product was
ligated into the pTARGET™ Mammalian Expression
Vector. The GeneEditor™ in vitro Site-Directed Mutagenesis System was
used to introduce four different codon substitutions in the
Cbg cDNA. Once created, the mutated and
unmodified Cbg cDNA constructs were transfected
into HEK 293T (human embryonic kidney) cells. After 48 hours, the
supernatant was collected to analyze secreted CBG.
PubMed Number:
16702435
The Flexi® Vector Systems (Cat.# C8640,
C8820, C9320) are based on a simple, yet powerful, directional
cloning method for protein-coding sequences. First, a PCR product is generated by
primers designed with two rare-cutting restriction enzymes, SgfI and PmeI. Then,
after restriction enzyme digestion, the insert can ligate in a single orientation.
All Flexi® Vectors carry the lethal barnase gene, which is
replaced by the DNA fragment of interest and acts as a positive selection for the
successful ligation of the insert. The two restriction enzymes provide a rapid,
efficient and high-fidelity way to transfer protein-coding regions between a variety
of Flexi® Vectors without the need to resequence while
maintaining the reading frame (see Figure 13.4 for system overview and Figure
13.5 for list of example vectors). A current list of available vectors can be found
at: www.promega.com/catalog/catalogredirect.asp?partno=c8640. To design PCR
primers appropriate for your insert and with SgfI and PmeI restriction sites, visit
the Flexi® Vector Primer Design
Tool.
Unlike site-specific recombination vector systems, the
Flexi® Vector Systems do not require appending multiple
amino acids to the amino or carboxy termini of the protein of interest (Figure 13.6).
In addition, the systems do not require an archival entry vector, and most
applications allow direct entry into the vector suited to the experimental design
(e.g., mammalian expression or N-terminal, glutathione-S-transferase (GST) fusion
vectors). For instance, you might clone your PCR product into the pFN2A (GST)
Flexi® Vector to express your GST-tagged protein in
E. coli for purification. However, an easy transfer of your
insert after SgfI/PmeI digest followed by ligation into the pF4K CMV
Flexi® Vector will allow you to transfect the same
protein-coding region into a mammalian cell and determine its expression level.
Any Flexi® Vector can act as an acceptor of a
protein-coding region flanked by SgfI and PmeI sites (Figure 13.7). The SgfI site is
upstream of the start codon of the protein-coding region, and depending upon the
Flexi® Vector used for cloning, this allows the
expression of a native (untagged) protein or an amino (N)-terminal-tagged protein by
readthrough of the SgfI site. The PmeI site contains the stop codon for the
protein-coding region and appends a single valine residue to the carboxy (C)-terminus
of the protein (Figure 13.6).
The C-terminal Flexi® Vectors allow expression of
C-terminal-tagged proteins. While these vectors can act as acceptors of
protein-coding regions flanked by SgfI and PmeI, they lack a PmeI site and contain a
different blunt-ended site, EcoICRI. Inserts cloned using these sites cannot be
removed from the C-terminal Flexi® Vectors and transferred
to other Flexi® Vectors (Figure 13.4, Panel B).
Additional Resources for the Flexi® Vector Systems
Technical Bulletins and Manuals
TM254
Flexi® Vector Systems Technical
Manual
Promega Publications
CN011
Clone and express protein-coding regions using the
Flexi® Vector Systems
PN094
The next-generation assay for mammalian protein interactions: The
CheckMate™/Flexi® Vector Mammalian Two-Hybrid
System
PN093
The Flexi® Vector Systems: The easy way to
clone
PN091
Metal affinity tag for protein expression and purification using the
Flexi® Vectors
PN089
A new system for cloning and expressing protein-coding regions
Online Tools
Flexi® Vector Systems Animation
Flexi® Vector Primer Design
Tool
Citations
Blommel, P.G.
et al. (2006) High efficiency single step production of expression plasmids from cDNA
clones using the Flexi Vector cloning system.
Protein Expr. Purif. 47, 562–70.
In this study, the Flexi® Vector Systems
was compared with the Gateway® Cloning System
to determine its utility in high-throughput expression cloning by
subcloning 96 human target genes. A direct comparison between pVP16, the
Gateway vector, and the equivalent Flexi®
Vector, pVP33A or K, was achieved by modifying pVP16 with the barnase
gene and PmeI/SgfI restriction sites, duplicating the design available in
the commercial Flexi® Vectors. Capture of
genes by PCR amplification of the cDNAs was similar for both systems, but
the timeline for the Flexi® Vector system was
shorter at 6–8 days compared to 12 days for the
Gateway® system. They also found the
Flexi® Vector System was lower cost and
more accurate due to the shorter primers required for the
Flexi® Vector cloning. Since the
amplification primers were shorter, the authors found nearly twofold
fewer missense errors in the Flexi® Vector
system. In their protocol, 96 cDNAs were amplified simultaneously and the
PCR products were cleaned up using either the
MagneSil® PCR Clean-Up System or
Wizard® SV 96 PCR Clean-Up, ligated into
the Flexi® Vector, and transformed into
Select96™ Competent Cells. They also compared transfer of cDNA inserts
between different Flexi® Vectors and transfer
of cDNA inserts between different Gateway®
vectors and found similar performance in the two systems. For the
Flexi® Vector test set, the authors
sequenced the clones, validating the high fidelity transfer of cDNA
inserts between Flexi® Vectors.
PubMed Number:
16377204
Temple, G.
et al. (2006) From genome to proteome: Developing expression clone resources for the
human genome.
Hum. Mol. Genet. 15, R31–R43.
The Kazusa cDNA Project is constructing a library of more than 1,000
“full ORF” (F-ORF) clones in the Flexi® Vector
System to characterize the function of proteins that are larger than
50kDa.
PubMed Number:
16651367
Promega offers a vast array of both modifying enzymes (e.g., ligase or
phosphatase) and restriction endonucleases for use in cloning. This section is an
overview of the products available from Promega to enhance your cloning results and
highlights the enzymes that may be most useful to you. For example, ligase is a key
enzyme in cloning as this enzyme joins the vector and insert to create a circular
recombinant plasmid. Restriction enzymes (REs) are used to cut a vector and a PCR
product, or other type of insert, to generate compatible ends for ligation. REs can
also evaluate the success of the ligation by screening the recombinant plasmid for
the correct restriction sites. To explore strategies for subcloning, visit the Subcloning
Notebook.
DNA Ligase
DNA ligase catalyzes the joining of two strands of DNA using the 5´-phosphate
and the 3´-hydroxyl groups of adjacent nucleotides in either a cohesive-ended or
blunt-ended configuration (Engler and Richardson, 1982). This allows the "pasting"
together of inserts and receptive vectors (e.g., A-tailed product into T vectors).
T4 DNA Ligase (Cat.# M1801, M1804,
M1794) can join DNA strands together and has also been shown to
catalyze the joining of RNA to a DNA or RNA strand in a duplex molecule. However,
DNA ligase will not join single-stranded nucleic acids (Engler and Richardson,
1982).
Additional Resources for T4 DNA Ligase
Technical Bulletins and Manuals
9PIM180
T4 DNA Ligase Promega Product Information
The LigaFast™ Rapid DNA Ligation System (Cat.#
M8221, M8225) is designed for the efficient ligation of
sticky-ended DNA inserts into plasmid vectors in just 5 minutes (blunt-ended
inserts in as little as 15 minutes). Rapid ligation is based on the combination of
T4 DNA Ligase with a unique 2X Rapid Ligation Buffer. The LigaFast™ System is
designed to eliminate any further purification prior to transformation of ligated
DNA. The specially formulated 2X Rapid Ligation Buffer requires no additional ATP
or Mg2+ prior to use.
Additional Resources for the LigaFast™ Rapid DNA Ligation System
Technical Bulletins and Manuals
9PIM822
LigaFast™ Rapid DNA Ligation System Promega Product
Information
Promega Publications
eNotes
Cloning differential display-PCR products with
pGEM®-T Easy Vector System
PN077
Technically Speaking: Subcloning plasmid DNA constructs
PN071
Rapid ligation for the pGEM®-T and
pGEM®-T Easy Vector Systems
Alkaline Phosphatases
Alkaline phosphatases catalyze the dephosphorylation of 5´ phosphates from DNA.
These enzymes are used to prevent recircularization and religation of linearized
vector DNA by removing 5´phosphate groups from both termini and may also be used
to dephosphorylate 5´ phosphorylated ends of DNA for subsequent labeling with
[32P]ATP and T4 Polynucleotide Kinase. Unit usage
guidelines are usually included with the alkaline phosphatase (e.g., 0.01 units
per picomole ends). For assistance in calculating picomoles of vector or insert
ends for dephosphorylation, visit the BioMath
Calculators.
TSAP Thermosensitive Alkaline Phosphatase (Cat.#
M9910) catalyzes the removal of 5´ phosphate groups from DNA and
is effective on 3´ overhangs, 5´ overhangs and blunt ends. TSAP is active in all
Promega restriction enzyme buffers, a convenience that allows a single,
streamlined restriction enzyme digestion-dephosphorylation step. TSAP is also
effectively and irreversibly inactivated by heating at 74°C for 15 minutes.
Therefore, a DNA cleanup step is not required before ligation.
Additional Resources for TSAP Thermosensitive Alkaline Phosphatase
Technical Bulletins and Manuals
9PIM991
TSAP Thermosensitive Alkaline Phosphatase Promega Product
Information
Promega Publications
eNotes
TSAP Thermosensitive Alkaline Phosphatase activity in restriction
enzyme buffers from New England Biolabs
PN095
TSAP: A new thermosensitive alkaline phosphatase
Alkaline Phosphatase, Calf Intestinal (CIAP; Cat.#
M1821, M2825), catalyzes the hydrolysis of 5´-phosphate groups
from DNA, RNA, and ribo- and deoxyribonucleoside triphosphates. This enzyme is not
inactivated by heat but can be denatured and removed by phenol extraction. CIAP is
active on 5´ overhangs and 5´ recessed and blunt ends (Sambrook et
al. 1989; Seeburg et al. 1977; Ullrich
et al. 1977; Meyerowitz et al. 1980;
Grosveld et al. 1981).
Additional Resources for Alkaline Phosphatase, Calf Intestinal
Technical Bulletins and Manuals
9PIM182
Alkaline Phosphatase, Calf Intestinal Promega Product
Information
Promega Publications
PN077
Technically Speaking: Subcloning plasmid DNA constructs
Restriction Enzymes
Restriction enzymes, also referred to as restriction endonucleases, are enzymes
that recognize short, specific (often palindromic) DNA sequences. They cleave
double-stranded DNA (dsDNA) at specific sites within or adjacent to their
recognition sequences. Most restriction enzymes (REs) will not cut DNA that is
methylated on one or both strands of their recognition site, although some require
substrate methylation. A complete listing of restriction enzymes available from
Promega can be found on the web.
Additional Resources for Restriction Enzymes
Promega Publications
PN081
Work smarter using isoschizomers and neoschizomers
Online Tools
Restriction Enzyme Resource Guide
Citations
Capozzo, A.V.E.
et al. (2003) Development of DNA vaccines against hemolytic-uremic syndrome in a
murine model.
Infect. Immun. 71, 3971–8.
Researchers used the pGEM®-T Vector
System to clone the entire 1.4kb Shiga toxin type 2 gene (Stx2) from
E. coli O157-H7 C600 (933W). The resultant
construct, named pGEMTStx2, was used as a template in PCR to amplify
each region of the gene corresponding to Shiga toxin type 2 subunits A
and B. Each PCR product was digested with BamHI and EcoRI before
ligation into pCDNA 3.1+ (Invitrogen) to create pStx2ΔA and pStx2B.
Mice were then immunized with either one or both of these constructs
and another construct expressing murine granulocyte-macrophage
colony-stimulating factor. Expression of each subunit in mouse tissue
was verified by RT-PCR with specific primers and the AccessQuick™
RT-PCR System.
PubMed Number:
12819084
Jordan, R.A.
et al. (2003) Production of genetically engineered biotinylated interleukin-2 and
its application in a rapid nonradioactive assay for T-cell activation.
Clin. Diagn. Lab. Immunol. 10, 339–44.
Researchers used PCR primers with KpnI and HindIII restriction
sites to clone human IL-2 from a known rhIL-2 E.
coli clone containing the PTCGF-11 vector. The PCR product
was digested with KpnI and HindIII and cloned into the PinPoint™ Xa-3
Vector. The vector was transformed into competent E.
coli cells, the cells were induced to express the cloned
protein, and the protein was isolated and determined to be
biotinylated rhIL-2.
PubMed Number:
12738628
Transforming a newly constructed plasmid into competent E.
coli cells is the primary method to propagate and select for the clone or
clones of interest. Competent bacterial cells are receptive to importing foreign DNA
and replicating it. High-quality competent E. coli is an
integral part of a successful cloning protocol.
JM109 Competent Cells
JM109 Competent Cells (Cat.# L2001) are prepared
according to a modified procedure of Hanahan, 1985. These cells are transformed
with plasmid DNA via the heat-shock method. JM109 cells (Yanisch-Perron
et al. 1985) are an ideal host for many molecular biology
applications and can be used for α-complementation of β-galactosidase for
blue/white screening.
Additional Resources for JM109 Competent Cells
Technical Bulletins and Manuals
TB095
E. coli Competent Cells Technical Bulletin
Promega Publications
eNotes
What are the effects of the bacterial DNA restriction-modification
systems on cloning and manipulations of DNA in E.
coli?
Citations
Tambong, J.T.
et al. (2006) Oligonucleotide array for identification and detection of
Pythium species.
Appl. Environ. Microbiol. 72, 2691–706.
This study compared detection of Pythium
species in soil samples by DNA array hybridization and PCR cloning.
DNA fragments from three Pythium species were
amplified from purified total DNA in soil samples, a single 3′ A
overhang was added to the resulting PCR product, and the DNA ligated
into the pGEM®-T Easy Vector overnight at
4°C. The ligated vector was transformed into JM109 Competent Cells,
and 100 colonies were chosen and grown overnight in LB broth. The
plasmid DNA was isolated using the Wizard®
SV 96 Plasmid DNA Purification System and then sequenced.
PubMed Number:
16597974
Jordan, R.A.
et al. (2003) Production of genetically engineered biotinylated interleukin-2 and
its application in a rapid nonradioactive assay for T-cell activation.
Clin. Diagn. Lab. Immunol. 10, 339–44.
Researchers used PCR to subclone human IL-2 from a known rhIL-2
E. coli clone into the PinPoint™ Xa-3 Vector.
Transformed E. coli JM109 clones were then
pre-incubated in the presence of 8μM biotin for 2 hours before being
induced with 100μM IPTG for an additional 2 hours. After induction,
the cells were collected and resuspended before mechanical lysis with
a French press. The lysate was then passed over a SoftLink™ Soft
Release Avidin Resin column and the biotinylated rhIL-2 eluted. The
resultant purified biotinylated rhIL-2 displayed similar properties
and biological activity to native IL-2. Elutants from cells
transformed with the PinPoint™ Xa Control Vector produced no
biotinylated rhIL-2 and did not display any properties indicating that
IL-2 was present.
PubMed Number:
12738628
Single Step (KRX) Competent Cells
Single Step (KRX) Competent Cells (Cat.# L3001,
L3002) are not only highly competent and compatible with
blue/white screening but can be used for tightly controlled protein expression.
KRX incorporates a chromosomal copy of the T7 RNA polymerase gene driven by a
rhamnose promoter (rhaBAD). T7 RNA polymerase-based systems
(Studier and Moffat, 1986) are one of the most widely used protein expression
systems by virtue of its well-defined promoter, which is completely independent of
E. coli RNA polymerase promoters, and its rapid elongation
rate, about five times that of E. coli RNA polymerases. The
rhaBAD promoter is subject to catabolite repression by
glucose, is activated by addition of rhamnose to the medium, and provides precise
control of T7 RNA polymerase abundance and thereby precise control of recombinant
protein production.
Additional Resources for Single Step (KRX) Competent Cells
Technical Bulletins and Manuals
TB352
Single Step (KRX) Competent Cells Technical Bulletin
Promega Publications
PN097
15N protein labeling using
Escherichia coli strain KRX
PN096
Compatibility of Single Step (KRX) Competent Cells with the MagneGST™
Pull-Down System
PN096
Selenomethionine protein labeling using the Escherichia
coli strain KRX
PN094
The Single Step (KRX) Competent Cells: Efficient cloning and high
protein yields
HB101 Competent Cells
HB101 Competent Cells (Cat.# L2011) are prepared
according to a modified procedure of Hanahan, 1985. HB101 cells (Yanisch-Perron
et al. 1985) are useful for cloning with vectors that do
not require α-complementation for blue/white screening.
Additional Resources for HB101 Competent Cells
Technical Bulletins and Manuals
TB095
E. coli Competent Cells Technical Bulletin
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The following protocol is a general procedure to analyze and purify a PCR
fragment. Protocols for amplification can be found in the Protocols and
Applications Guide chapter on PCR Applications. Additional information
regarding PCR, analysis and product purification can be found in the following
resources:
Amplification
A basic protocol for amplifying genomic DNA by PCR can be found in the
Protocols and Applications Guide chapter on PCR
Applications, in the section "Example of a PCR Protocol".
Analysis
Materials Required:
(see Composition of Solutions section)
- aliquot of amplification reaction (usually 5–10µl)
-
Optional: Blue/Orange Loading Dye, 6X (Cat.#
G1881) if GoTaq® Green
Reaction Buffer is not used
- appropriately sized DNA marker
- appropriate percentage agarose gel (typically 0.8–1.2%; see Table 13.1
for guidelines)
- gel running buffer (1X TAE or 0.5X TBE)
- 10mg/ml ethidium bromide
- Analyze 5–10µl of the amplification reaction using agarose gel
electrophoresis. Include at least one lane containing a DNA size marker to
determine if the PCR products are of the correct size. The products should
be readily visible by UV transillumination of the ethidium bromide-stained
gel (50µg/ml final concentration in the agarose).
- Store reaction products at –20°C until needed.
| Table 13.1. Gel Percentages: Resolution of Linear DNA on Agarose Gels. |
| Recommended % Agarose |
Optimum Resolution for Linear DNA |
| 0.5 |
1,000–30,000bp |
| 0.7 |
800–12,000bp |
| 1.0 |
500–10,000bp |
| 1.2 |
400–7,000bp |
| 1.5 |
200–3,000bp |
| 2.0 |
50–2,000bp |
If there are primer dimers or at least two PCR products present, the band of
interest will need to be removed and purified (see the next section, PCR Cleanup,
for more information). To minimize the number of extraneous amplimers, the PCR
conditions may need to be optimized. For suggestions on troubleshooting PCR, visit
the
Protocols and Applications Guide chapter on PCR
Applications.
PCR Cleanup
Once you have determined the PCR was successful, you can purify the desired
product from the rest of the reaction components. This can be accomplished using a
number of procedures including the Wizard® SV Gel and
PCR Clean-Up System (Cat.# A9280, A9281, A9282) or
agarose gel isolation. Alternatively, you can use a portion of the amplification
reaction directly in a ligation. However, the presence of primer dimers or other
amplimers present can cause false-positive reactions or yield an incorrect clone
(see Figure 13.8). If the reaction is clean (i.e., a single band seen on an
analytical gel) and is a minimum of 100bp in size, you can use the
Wizard® SV Gel and PCR Clean-Up System to directly
purify the PCR product [see the
Protocols and Applications Guide chapter on DNA
Purification for product protocol].
If there are other bands or a large primer-dimer band present, we recommend gel
electrophoresis to separate the products so the desired band can be excised. The
DNA can be recovered using an agarose-digesting enzyme such as
AgarACE™ Enzyme (Cat.# M1741,
M1743) or by melting the excised agarose and using the
Wizard® SV Gel and PCR Clean-Up System.
Optional: A-Tailing Reaction for Blunt-Ended Products:
If a proofreading DNA polymerase was used for amplification and you want to
clone into a T vector, an adenosine residue must be added onto the PCR product.
This can be accomplished by incubating the DNA fragment with dATP and a
nonproofreading DNA polymerase, which will add a single 3′ A residue. Blunt DNA
fragments resulting from restriction enzyme digestion can also be cloned into T
vector after adding an adenosine residue.
Materials Required:
- blunt-ended product (from PCR or restriction enzyme digestion),
purified
- GoTaq® Flexi DNA Polymerase
- 25mM MgCl2
- 5X GoTaq® Colorless or Green Reaction
Buffer
- 1mM dATP (Cat.# U1205; diluted 1:100 in
nuclease-free water)
- Set up the following reaction in a thin-walled PCR tube:
|
| Purified DNA fragment |
1–4.4µl |
| 5X GoTaq® Reaction Buffer (Colorless
or Green) |
2µl |
| 1mM dATP (0.2mM final concentration) |
2µl |
| GoTaq® Flexi DNA Polymerase (5u/µl) |
1µl |
| 25mM MgCl2 (1.5mM final concentration) |
0.6µl |
| Nuclease-free water to |
10µl
|
- Incubate at 70°C for 15–30 minutes in a water bath or thermal cycler.
After the tailing reaction is finished, 1–2µl can be used without further
cleanup for ligation with pGEM®-T or
pGEM®-T Easy Vector Systems.
Materials Required:
(see Composition of Solutions section)
- PCR product (has an A overhang and optional purification) or blunt DNA
fragment with an A residue added
- pGEM®-T Easy Vector System
(Cat.# A1380) or
pGEM®-T Easy Vector System (Cat.#
A3610)Both systems include T4 DNA ligase and
chemically competent JM109 cells.
- Nuclease-Free Water (Cat.# P1193)
-
Optional: 4°C water bath
- LB-Ampicillin plates containing X-Gal and IPTG
- high-efficiency competent cells [e.g., JM109 Competent Cells
(Cat.# L2001) or Single Step KRX Competent
Cells (Cat.# L3001)]
- SOC medium
- 42°C water bath
- ice
Vector:Insert Ratio
After the insert DNA has been prepared for ligation, estimate the concentration
by comparing the staining intensity with that of DNA molecular weight standards of
known concentrations on an ethidium bromide-stained agarose gel. If the vector DNA
concentration is unknown, estimate the vector concentration by the same method.
Test various vector:insert DNA ratios to determine the optimal ratio for a
particular vector and insert. In most cases, either a 1:1 or a 1:3 molar ratio of
vector:insert works well. The following example illustrates the calculation of the
amount of insert required at a specific molar ratio of vector.
[ng of vector × size of insert (in kb)] ÷ size of vector (in kb) × molar amount
of (insert ÷ vector) = ng of insert
Example:
How much 500bp insert DNA needs to be added to 100ng of 3.0kb vector in a
ligation reaction for a desired vector:insert ratio of 1:3?
[(100ng vector × 0.5kb insert) ÷ 3.0kb vector] × (3 ÷ 1) = 50ng insert
Ligation
- Briefly centrifuge the pGEM®-T or
pGEM®-T Easy Vector and Control Insert DNA
tubes to collect contents at the bottom of the tube.
- Set up ligation reactions as described below. Vortex the 2X Rapid
Ligation Buffer vigorously before each use. Use 0.5ml tubes known to have
low DNA-binding capacity.
|
| Reagents |
Standard Reaction |
Positive Control |
Background Control |
| 2X Rapid Ligation Buffer |
5µl |
5µl |
5µl |
| pGEM®-T or
pGEM®-T Easy Vector (50ng) |
1µl |
1µl |
1µl |
| PCR product |
Xµl |
– |
– |
| Control Insert DNA |
– |
2µl |
– |
| T4 DNA Ligase (3 Weiss units/µl) |
1µl |
1µl |
1µl |
| Nuclease-Free Water to a final volume of |
10µl
|
10µl
|
10µl
|
- Mix the reactions by pipetting. Incubate the reactions for 1 hour at room
temperature. Alternatively, incubate the reactions overnight at 4°C for the
maximum number of transformants.
Transformation
- Prepare LB/ampicillin/IPTG/X-Gal plates (see Composition of Solutions).
- Centrifuge the ligation reactions briefly. Add 2µl of each ligation
reaction to a sterile 1.5 ml microcentrifuge tube on ice. Prepare a
transformation control tube with 0.1ng of an uncut plasmid.
pGEM®-T Vectors are not suitable
for the transformation control as they are linear, not circular.
Note: In our experience, the use of larger (17 × 100mm)
polypropylene tubes (e.g., BD Falcon Cat.# 352059) has been observed to
increase transformation efficiency. Tubes from some manufacturers bind DNA,
thereby decreasing the colony number, and should be avoided.
- Place the high-efficiency JM109 Competent Cells in an ice bath until
just thawed (5 minutes). Mix cells by gently flicking the tube.
- Carefully transfer 50µl of cells to the ligation reaction tubes prepared
in Step 2. Use 100µl of cells for the transformation control tube. Gently
flick the tubes, and incubate on ice for 20 minutes.
- Heat-shock the cells for 45–50 seconds in a water bath at exactly 42°C.
DO NOT SHAKE. Immediately return the tubes to ice for 2 minutes.
- Add 950µl of room temperature SOC medium to the ligation reaction
transformations and 900µl to the tranformation control tube. Incubate for
1.5 hours at 37°C with shaking (~150rpm).
- Plate 100µl of each transformation culture onto duplicate
LB/ampicillin/IPTG/X-Gal plates. For the transformation control, a 1:10
dilution with SOC is recommended prior to plating.
- Incubate plates overnight at 37°C. Select white colonies.
Calculation of Transformation Efficiency
For every transformation with competent cells, we recommend performing a
transformation control experiment using a known quantity of a purified,
supercoiled plasmid DNA (e.g., pGEM®-3Z Vector,
Cat.# P2151). Calculate the transformation
efficiency as described below.
transformation efficiency (cfu/µg) = (cfu on control plate ÷ ng of supercoiled
vector plated) × (103ng/µg) × final dilution factor
cfu = colony forming units
Example:
A 100µl aliquot of competent cells is transformed with 1ng of supercoiled
pGEM®-3Z Vector DNA. Ten microliters of the
transformation reaction (0.1ng total DNA) is added to 990µl of SOC medium (1:100
dilution). Of that volume (1,000µl), a 100µl aliquot is plated (1:1,000 final
dilution), and 100 colonies are obtained on the plate. What is the transformation
efficiency?
(100cfu ÷ 0.1ng of supercoiled vector plated) ×
(103ng/µg) × 1,000 = 1 x 109
cfu/µg
To determine if the insert was successfully cloned, there are two methods for
screening the transformed bacteria: colony PCR or plasmid miniprep followed by
restriction enzyme digestion.
Successful cloning of an insert into the pGEM®-T and
pGEM®-T Easy Vectors disrupts the coding sequence of
the β-galactosidase α peptide. Recombinant clones can usually be identified by color
screening on X-Gal/IPTG indicator plates following transformation of competent cells.
However, the characteristics of PCR products cloned into these T vectors can
significantly affect the ratio of blue:white colonies obtained. Clones that contain
PCR products, in most cases, produce white colonies, but blue colonies can result
from PCR fragments that are cloned in-frame with the lacZ gene.
Such fragments are usually a multiple of 3 base pairs long (including the 3´-A
overhangs) and do not contain in-frame stop codons. There have been reports of DNA
fragments of up to 2kb that have been cloned in-frame and have produced blue
colonies.
Even if your PCR product is not a multiple of 3 bases long, the amplification
process can introduce mutations (e.g., deletions or point mutations) that may result
in blue colonies when competent cells are transformed with the fragment inserted into
the pGEM®-T or pGEM®-T Easy
Vectors.
Screening of recombinant clones using restriction enzymes is more time consuming
than that of colony PCR. It involves isolating the plasmid DNA from liquid cultures
of individual E. coli colonies, performing the enzyme digestion
and determining if the insert is of the correct size. To learn more about screening
by restriction enzyme digestion, visit the Subcloning
Notebook.
The following protocol is for colony PCR analysis of transformants.
Materials Required:
(see Composition of Solutions section)
- plate of colonies containing the recombinant plasmid
- toothpicks or sterile bacterial loop
- LB Broth (optional)
- upstream screening primer
- downstream screening primer
- GoTaq® Flexi DNA Polymerase
- 5X Green GoTaq® Flexi Buffer
- 25mM MgCl2
- Nuclease-Free Water (Cat.# P1193)
- Nuclease-Free Light Mineral Oil (e.g., Sigma Cat.# M5904 or Promega
Cat.# DY1151) if you are using a thermal
cycler without a heated lid; do not autoclave
- dNTP Mix (10mM of each dNTP; Cat.# U1511,
U1515)
- Pick a well-isolated colony using either a sterile toothpick or a flamed and
cooled bacterial loop, and transfer to 50µl of sterile water. Part of the
colony may be transferred to LB medium containing the appropriate antibiotic
for overnight culture and plasmid miniprep, if desired.
- Boil for 10 minutes to break open the bacterial cell wall and release the
DNA.
- Centrifuge at 16,000 × g for 5 minutes to pellet the
cell debris.
- Use 5µl of the supernatant in a 50µl amplification reaction (see Table 13.2
for a sample reaction).
| Table 13.2. Colony PCR using GoTaq® Flexi DNA Polymerase. |
| Components |
Volume |
Final Concentration |
| Nuclease-Free Water (to a final volume of 50µl) |
Xµl |
|
| 5X Reaction Buffer |
10µl |
1X |
| dNTP mix (10mM of each dNTP) |
1µl |
0.2mM each |
| GoTaq® DNA polymerase (5u/µl) |
0.25µl |
0.025u/µl |
| 25mM MgCl2
|
3µl |
1.5mM |
| Downstream screening primer |
50pmol1
|
1µM |
| Upstream screening primer |
50pmol1
|
1µM |
| Boiled colony supernatant |
5µl |
|
1A general formula for calculating the number of nanograms of primer
equivalent to 50pmol is: 50pmol = 16.3ng × b; where b is the number of
bases in the primer.
- Amplify the target DNA using cycling conditions appropriate for your
screening primers and size of amplimer (see Table 13.3 for suggestions). Place
reactions in a thermal cycler that has been preheated to 94°C.
| Table 13.3. Suggested Amplification Conditions. |
| Step |
Temperature |
Time (minutes) |
Cycles |
| Initial denaturation |
94°C |
2 |
1 |
| Denaturation |
94°C |
0.5–1.0 |
25–35 |
| Annealing |
42–65°C1
|
0.5–1.0 |
|
| Extension |
72°C |
1 minute/kilobase2
|
|
| Final extension |
72°C |
5 |
1 |
| Soak/Hold |
4°C |
Indefinite |
1 |
1Annealing temperature should be optimized for each primer set based on
the primer melting temperature (Tm). To calculate
melting temperatures of primers in GoTaq®
Reaction Buffer, go to BioMath
Calculators.
2The extension time should be at least 1 minute per kilobase of target.
Typically, amplimers smaller than 1kb use a 1-minute extension.
- Remove an aliquot of the completed PCR and analyze by agarose gel
electrophoresis for the appropriate size product, which indicates the correct
insert is present in the clone.
-
Recommended: Culture the appropriate colony or colonies to create
a glycerol stock of your recombinant plasmid or plasmids, and purify the
plasmids in larger quantities [e.g., PureYield™ Plasmid Systems
(Cat.# A2492, A2495)] for downstream
applications or further manipulation.
Classic subcloning involves restriction digestion of the plasmid of interest to
remove the desired DNA fragment followed by ligation into a second vector with
compatible ends. PCR can be used for subcloning as well, using the A overhangs to
clone into another T vector. Alternatively, the PCR product can be generated using
primers with restriction enzyme sites, cut with the appropriate enzymes, then cloned
into a vector with compatible ends. Further information on subcloning can be found by
visiting the Subcloning
Notebook.
return to top of page
The desired protein-coding region must be amplified by PCR before being cloned
into the Flexi® Vectors (Figures 13.6 and 13.7). The
optimal conditions for amplifying the protein-coding region will depend on the DNA
template, DNA polymerase, PCR primers and other reaction parameters. We recommend
following the protocol provided with the DNA polymerase to generate the PCR product.
For protein-coding regions less than 700bp, consider using
GoTaq® DNA Polymerase to amplify your protein-coding
region. For regions greater than 700bp, we recommend the use of a high-fidelity DNA
polymerase, such as Pfu DNA polymerase. To facilitate cloning,
the PCR primers used to amplify the protein-coding region must append an SgfI site
and a PmeI site to the PCR product. To append these sites, incorporate an SgfI site
in your amino-terminal PCR primer and a PmeI site in your carboxy-terminal PCR
primer. Transfer of protein-coding regions into N-terminal fusion vectors results in
translational readthrough of the SgfI site, which encodes the peptide sequence
Ala-Ile-Ala. The PmeI site is placed at the carboxy terminus, appending a single
valine residue to the last amino acid of the protein-coding region. The valine codon,
GTT, is immediately followed by an ochre stop codon, TAA. Primer design guidelines
are provided in Technical Manual #TM254 and the Flexi® Vector Primer Design Tool.
To cleanup the PCR product, refer to Amplification,
Analysis and PCR Cleanup.
Digestion reactions for the PCR product and the acceptor
Flexi® Vector can be performed concurrently.
Note: Do not use C-terminal Flexi® Vectors,
which have names starting with ”pFC”, as acceptors for PCR products if you plan to
transfer the protein-coding region to a different Flexi®
Vector in the future. C-terminal Flexi® Vectors lack PmeI
sites and cannot serve as donors for other Flexi® Vectors.
Materials Required:
- Flexi® System, Entry/Transfer
(Cat.# C8640)
- chosen acceptor Flexi® Vector
- purified PCR product
- Thaw the 5X Flexi® Digest Buffer, the acceptor
Flexi® Vector and Nuclease- Free Water, and store
on ice. Vortex the 5X Flexi® Digest Buffer and the
acceptor Flexi® Vector before use.
- Assemble the following reaction components to cut the PCR product with SgfI
and PmeI.
|
| Component |
Volume |
| 5X Flexi® Digest Buffer |
4µl |
| Purified PCR product (up to 500ng) |
Xµl |
| Flexi® Enzyme Blend (SgfI and PmeI) |
4µl |
| Nuclease-Free Water to a final volume of |
20µl
|
- Assemble the following reaction components to cut the acceptor
Flexi® Vector with SgfI and PmeI.
|
| Component |
Volume |
| Nuclease-Free Water |
12µl |
| 5X Flexi® Digest Buffer |
4µl |
| Acceptor Flexi® Vector (200ng) |
2µl |
| Flexi® Enzyme Blend (SgfI and PmeI) |
2µl |
| Final Volume of |
20µl
|
Note: Take care when pipetting solutions that contain glycerol, such
as the Flexi® Enzyme Blend, because small volumes are
difficult to pipet accurately.
- Incubate both reactions (Steps 2 and 3) at 37°C for 30 minutes.
- Heat the reaction with the Flexi® Vector (Step 3)
at 65°C for 20 minutes to inactivate the restriction enzymes. Store on ice
until the PCR product and vector are ligated in Ligation
of PCR Product and Acceptor Flexi®
Vector.
- Directly purify the digested PCR product using the
Wizard® SV Gel and PCR Cleanup System
(Cat.# A9281).
- Assemble the following reaction components:
- Incubate at room temperature for 1 hour.
Note: The 2X Flexi® Ligase Buffer
contains ATP, which degrades during temperature fluctuations. Avoid multiple
freeze-thaw cycles and exposure to frequent temperature changes by making
single-use aliquots of the buffer.
Note: Do not use this protocol to screen for inserts in C-terminal
Flexi® Vectors, which have names starting with “pFC”,
since these clones lack PmeI sites.
Materials Required:
(see Composition of Solutions section)
- Chill reaction components and reaction tubes or plates.
- Prepare a master mix by combining the components listed below. Increase
volumes proportionately depending on the number of reactions.
|
| Component |
Volume per Reaction |
| Nuclease-Free Water |
10.5µl |
| 5X Flexi® Digest Buffer |
4µl |
| 10X Flexi® Enzyme Blend (SgfI and PmeI) |
2µl |
| Final Volume of |
15µl
|
- Add 15µl of master mix to 5µl (200–500ng) of plasmid DNA. Mix thoroughly by
pipetting.
- Incubate for 2 hours at 37°C.
- Add 5µl of loading dye (Blue/Orange Loading Dye, 6X, Cat.#
G1881). Incubate at 65°C for 10 minutes.
- Load 20µl of the reaction onto a 1% agarose gel and separate fragments by
electrophoresis. Visualize the fragments by ethidium bromide staining.
Transfer refers to moving your protein-coding region from one
Flexi® Vector (donor) to another
Flexi® Vector (acceptor). Choose an appropriate acceptor
vector with the desired expression and tag options and a different antibiotic
resistance marker than the donor because antibiotic selection is the basis for
selecting the desired clone (Figures 13.5, 13.9 and 13.10).
There are two basic categories of Flexi® Vectors, those
containing SgfI and PmeI sites and expressing either a native (untagged) protein or
an N-terminal-tagged protein, and those containing SgfI and EcoICRI sites and
expressing a C-terminal-tagged protein. Flexi® Vectors for
expressing C-terminal-tagged proteins act only as acceptors, never as donor vectors.
To transfer protein-coding regions between Flexi® Vectors
expressing native protein or an N-terminal-tagged protein, the donor and acceptor
vectors are digested with SgfI and PmeI simultaneously, prior to ligation of the
insert, transformation and selection of the cells (Figure 13.9).
To create a C-terminal-tagged protein, the donor plasmid expressing native protein
or an N-terminal-tagged protein is digested with SgfI and PmeI. Because EcoICRI cuts
frequently in protein-coding regions, the acceptor plasmid containing the C-terminal
tag is digested with SgfI and EcoICRI in a separate reaction. The two separate
digests are combined for ligation of the insert, transformation and selection of the
cells (Figure 13.10).
Transfer of Protein-Coding Regions Between Flexi®
Vectors Expressing Native or N-Terminal Fusion Proteins
Materials Required:
- Flexi® System, Transfer
(Cat.# C8820)
- competent E. coli cells [e.g., JM109 Competent
Cells (Cat.# L2001) or Single Step (KRX)
Competent Cells (Cat.# L3001)]
- LB plates supplemented with the appropriate antibiotic at the
appropriate concentration used (see Composition of
Solutions and Figure 13.5)
- Use the Wizard®
Plus SV Minipreps DNA Purification System
(Cat.# A1330),
Wizard® SV 96 Plasmid DNA Purification System
(Cat.# A2250) or a similar method to
prepare the donor Flexi® Vector DNA [see the
Protocols and Applications Guide chapter on DNA
Purification]. Adjust the volume, so the final DNA concentration
is 50–100ng/µl.
- Assemble the following reaction components to cut the
Flexi® Vectors:
|
| Component |
Volume |
| 5X Flexi® Digest Buffer |
4µl |
| Acceptor Flexi® Vector (100ng) |
1µl |
| Donor Flexi® Vector (100ng) |
Xµl |
| Flexi® Enzyme Blend (SgfI and PmeI) |
2µl |
| Nuclease-Free Water to a final volume of |
20µl
|
Note: Take care when pipetting solutions that contain glycerol, such as the
Flexi® Enzyme Blend, because small volumes are
difficult to pipet accurately.
- Incubate at 37°C for 15–30 minutes.
- Heat the reaction at 65°C for 20 minutes to inactivate the restriction
enzymes. Store the reaction on ice while assembling the ligation reaction in
Step 5.
- Assemble the following ligation reaction components:
|
| Component |
Volume |
| 2X Flexi® Ligase Buffer |
10µl |
| Digested DNA from Step 4 (100ng total) |
10µl |
| T4 DNA Ligase (HC; 20u/µl) |
1µl |
| Final volume of |
21µl
|
- Incubate at room temperature for 1 hour.
- Transform the ligation reaction into high-efficiency,
E. coli competent cells (≥1 ×
108cfu/µg DNA). If you are using competent cells
other than high-efficiency JM109 Competent Cells (Cat.#
L2001) purchased from Promega, it is important to follow the
appropriate transformation protocol. The recommended transformation protocol
for our high-efficiency JM109 Competent Cells is provided in Ligation and Transformation. Selection for
transformants should be on LB plates supplemented with 100µg/ml ampicillin
for Flexi® Vectors with the letter “A” in the
name or 30µg/ml kanamycin for Flexi® Vectors with
the letter “K” in the name, as appropriate for the acceptor
Flexi® Vector. See Figure 13.5 for a list of
antibiotic-resistance genes carried on the various vectors.
- Screen at least 4 colonies for each protein-coding region. Digest the
plasmid to ensure that SgfI and PmeI cleave their recognition sites flanking
the protein-coding region, so the insert can be cloned into other
Flexi® Vectors.
Screen at least 8 colonies for each protein-coding region transferred to
the pF3A WG (BYDV) or pF3K WG (BYDV) Flexi®
Vectors. Lower transfer frequencies with these vectors are due to a higher
background of plasmid backbone heterodimers between the WG (BYDV) Vectors
and other Flexi® Vectors. Other
Flexi® Vectors share common regions flanking
the SgfI and PmeI sites, such that plasmid backbone dimers are unstable
(Yoshimura et al. 1986). The pF3A and pF3K WG
(BYDV) Flexi® Vectors lack these common flanking
regions because of the inclusion of the BYDV translation-enhancing
sequences.
If you are using the pF3A WG (BYDV) or pF3K WG (BYDV)
Flexi® Vectors, the number of minipreps performed
can be reduced by prescreening colonies to identify those harboring plasmid
backbone heterodimers. Colonies containing such heterodimers can be
identified by their ability to grow on both antibiotics. Pick individual
colonies and restreak on an ampicillin plate and a kanamycin plate, or
inoculate two culture plates for overnight growth in media: one with
ampicillin and the other with kanamycin. Colonies containing the clone of
interest will grow only in the antibiotic associated with the acceptor
plasmid.
Transfer of Protein-Coding Regions from Native or N-Terminal
Flexi® Vectors to C-Terminal
Flexi® Vectors
Use the C-terminal Flexi® Vectors, which have names
starting with "pFC", as acceptors but not as donors since they lack PmeI sites.
Materials Required:
- Carboxy Flexi® System, Transfer
(Cat.# C9320)
- competent E. coli cells [e.g., JM109 Competent
Cells (Cat.# L2001) or Single Step (KRX)
Competent Cells (Cat.# L3001)]
- LB plates supplemented with the appropriate antibiotic at the
appropriate concentration used (see Composition of
Solutions and Figure 13.5)
- Use the Wizard®
Plus SV Minipreps DNA Purification System
(Cat.# A1330),
Wizard® SV 96 Plasmid DNA Purification System
(Cat.# A2250) or a similar method to
prepare the donor Flexi® Vector DNA [see the
Protocols and Applications Guide chapter on DNA
Purification]. Adjust the volume, so the final DNA concentration
is 50–100ng/µl.
- Assemble the following reaction components to cut the donor
Flexi® Vector:
|
| Component |
Volume |
| 5X Flexi® Digest Buffer |
2µl |
| Donor Flexi® Vector (100ng) |
Xµl |
| Flexi® Enzyme Blend (SgfI and PmeI) |
1µl |
| Nuclease-Free Water to a final volume of |
10µl
|
Note: Take care when pipetting solutions that contain glycerol, such as the
Flexi® Enzyme Blend, because small volumes are
difficult to pipet accurately.
- In a separate tube, assemble the following reaction components to cut the
acceptor C-terminal Flexi® Vector:
|
| Component |
Volume |
| Nuclease-Free Water |
6µl |
| 5X Flexi® Digest Buffer |
2µl |
| Acceptor C-Terminal Flexi® Vector
(100ng)1
|
1µl |
| Carboxy Flexi® Enzyme Blend (SgfI
and EcoICRI) |
1µl |
| Final volume |
10µl
|
1Acceptor C-terminal Flexi® Vectors will
have names starting with "pFC".
- Incubate both reactions at 37°C for 15–30 minutes.
- Heat both reactions at 65°C for 20 minutes to inactivate the restriction
enzymes. Store the reactions on ice while assembling the ligation reaction
in Step 6.
- Assemble the following ligation reaction components:
|
| Component |
Volume |
| 2X Flexi® Ligase Buffer |
10µl |
| Digested donor Flexi® Vector
prepared in Step 2 (approximately 50ng) |
5µl |
| Digested acceptor C-terminal Flexi®
Vector prepared in Step 3 (50ng) |
5µl |
| T4 DNA Ligase (HC; 20u/µl) |
1µl |
| Nuclease-Free Water to a final volume of |
21µl
|
- Incubate at room temperature for 1 hour.
- Transform the ligation reaction into high-efficiency,
E. coli competent cells (≥1 ×
108cfu/µg DNA). If you are using competent cells
other than high-efficiency JM109 Competent Cells (Cat.#
L2001) purchased from Promega, it is important to follow the
appropriate transformation protocol. The recommended transformation protocol
for our high-efficiency JM109 Competent Cells is provided in Ligation and Transformation. Selection for
transformants should be on LB plates supplemented with 100µg/ml ampicillin
for Flexi® Vectors with the letter “A” in the
name or 30µg/ml kanamycin for Flexi® Vectors with
the letter “K” in the name, as appropriate for the acceptor
Flexi® Vector. See Figure 13.5 for a list of
antibiotic-resistance genes carried on the various vectors.
- Screen at least 8 colonies for each protein-coding region. Successful
plasmid constructs will not cut with PmeI but will cut with SgfI. Lower
transfer frequencies are due to a higher background of plasmid backbone
heterodimers between the C-terminal Flexi®
Vectors and other Flexi® Vectors. Other
Flexi® Vectors share common regions flanking
the SgfI and PmeI sites, such that plasmid backbone dimers are unstable
(Yoshimura et al. 1986). The C-terminal
Flexi® Vectors may lack these common flanking
regions because of the inclusion of the protein fusion tag sequence.
return to top of page
Materials Required:
- Nuclease-Free Water (Cat.# P1193)
- DNA Polymerase I Large (Klenow) Fragment and 10X Reaction Buffer
(Cat.# M2201) or T4 DNA Polymerase
(Cat.# M4211)
- T4 DNA Polymerase 10X buffer (optional)
- Bovine Serum Albumin (BSA), Acetylated, 1mg/ml (Cat.#
R9461)
- dNTPs, 100mM (Cat.# U1240)
Both Klenow (DNA Polymerase I Large Fragment) and T4 DNA Polymerase can be used
to fill 5′-protruding ends with deoxynucleotide triphosphates (dNTPs). Properties
of these enzymes are discussed in Anderson et al. 1980 and
Challberg and Englund, 1980.
Klenow Polymerase Method
For optimal activity, use the Klenow 10X Buffer supplied with the enzyme. DNA
Polymerase I Large (Klenow) Fragment is also active in many restriction enzyme
buffers, and some users may choose to perform the fill-in reaction directly in the
restriction buffer.
- Following the restriction enzyme digestion that generated the
5′-protruding ends, the DNA can be purified rapidly using the
Wizard® SV Gel and PCR Clean-Up System
(Cat.# A9281) or other DNA purification
system. Alternatively, the DNA can be extracted with phenol:chloroform,
ethanol precipitated and rehydrated for use in the conversion
reaction.
- Proceed with one of the following for the fill-in reaction (total
reaction volume can be between 10–100µl.):
For DNA purified over a column: The optimal reaction conditions
for filling in are: 1X Klenow Reaction Buffer [50mM Tris- HCl (pH 7.2), 10mM
MgSO4, 0.1mM DTT], 40µM of each dNTP, 20µg/ml
acetylated BSA and 1 unit of Klenow Fragment per microgram of DNA.
For digested DNA in restriction enzyme buffer: Klenow
Polymerase is also partially active in many restriction enzyme buffers (such
as our 4-CORE® Buffers), and the fill-in reaction
may be performed directly in the restriction enzyme buffer supplemented with
40µM of each dNTP, thereby eliminating the clean-up step. Add 1 unit of
Klenow Polymerase per microgram of DNA.
For ethanol-precipitated DNA: Resuspend DNA in Klenow 1X Buffer
containing 40µM of each dNTP and 20µg/ml of Acetylated Bovine Serum Albumin
(BSA). Add 1 unit of Klenow Polymerase per microgram of DNA.
- Incubate the reaction at room temperature for 10 minutes.
- Stop the reaction by heating at 75°C for 10 minutes.
T4 DNA Polymerase Method
Prepare the DNA as described for the Klenow Polymerase method. Like Klenow
Fragment, T4 DNA Polymerase functions well in many restriction enzyme buffers. Add
5 units of T4 DNA Polymerase per microgram of DNA, 100µM of each dNTP and
0.1mg/ml Acetylated BSA. The recommended reaction buffer for T4 DNA Polymerase is
1X T4 DNA Polymerase Buffer. Incubate the reaction at 37°C for 5 minutes. Stop the
reaction by heating at 75°C for 10 minutes or by adding 2µl of 0.5M EDTA.
Materials Required:
Note: T4 DNA Polymerase has a 3′→5′ exonuclease
activity that will, in the presence of excess dNTPs, convert a 3′-protruding end
to a blunt end (Burd and Wells, 1974).
- Following the restriction enzyme digestion that generates 3′-protruding
ends, leave the DNA in restriction enzyme buffer, exchange the buffer for 1X T4
DNA Polymerase Buffer or gel purify the desired fragment (see the PCR Cleanup
section of Amplification, Analysis and PCR
Cleanup).
- Add 5 units of T4 DNA Polymerase per microgram of DNA and 100µM of each
dNTP.
- Incubate at 37°C for 5 minutes.
Note: With high concentrations of dNTPs (100µM), degradation of
the DNA will stop at duplex DNA; however, if the dNTP supply is exhausted, the
very active exonuclease activity (200 times more active than that of DNA
polymerase I) will degrade the double-stranded DNA (Sambrook et
al. 1989).
- Stop the reaction by heating at 75°C for 10 minutes or by adding 2µl of 0.5M
EDTA.
If the ends of the prepared vector are identical (e.g., following a single
digestion), it is advantageous to treat the vector with TSAP Thermosensitive Alkaline
Phosphatase (Cat.# M9910) to remove the phosphate
groups from the 5′ ends to prevent self-ligation of the vector (Sambrook et
al. 1989). For linear vectors with unique 5′ ends, TSAP treatment is
not necessary.
Note: Since TSAP is active in all Promega restriction enzyme buffers,
the vector DNA easily can be restriction digested and dephosphorylated at the same
time. The following protocol reflects this streamlined method. See the
TSAP Thermosensitive Alkaline Phosphatase Product Information
#9PIM991 for alternative protocols.
- As a general guideline, for reactions containing up to 1µg of DNA, add 15
units of restriction enzyme and the amount of TSAP listed below to the vector
DNA in a total reaction volume of 20–50µl. Set up the reaction in the
appropriate 1X Promega restriction enzyme reaction buffer.
|
| Reaction Buffer |
Amount of TSAP for Reactions Containing ≤1µg DNA |
| Promega 10X Reaction Buffers A–L (except F) |
1µl |
| Promega 10X Reaction Buffer F |
2µl |
| MULTI-CORE™ 10X Buffer |
1µl |
- Incubate the reaction at 37°C for 15 minutes. This is a sufficient amount of
time to digest and dephosphorylate all vector DNA overhang types (3´, 5´ or
blunt).
- Heat-inactivate the TSAP and the restriction enzyme by incubating the
reaction at 74°C for 15 minutes.
Note: Not all restriction enzymes can be heat-inactivated. If the
restriction enzyme cannot be heat-inactivated, clean up the digest using the
Wizard® SV Gel and PCR Clean-Up System
(Cat.# A9281).
- Briefly centrifuge the reaction, and use approximately 40ng of
dephosphorylated vector in a ligation reaction containing DNA insert, 1X Rapid
Ligation Buffer, and 2µl (6 units) of T4 DNA Ligase (LigaFast™ Rapid DNA
Ligation Sytem, Cat.# M8221). Incubate ligation
reactions containing vector with 5´ or 3´ overhangs at 25°C for 5 minutes.
Incubate ligation reactions containing vector with blunt ends at 25°C for
15 minutes.
Note: Optimal vector-to-insert ratios may need to be determined.
We recommend using a 1:2 molar ratio of vector to insert DNA as a starting
point. See the LigaFast™ Rapid DNA Ligation System Product
Information
#9PIM822 for additional information.
- Transform the ligated material directly into E. coli
competent cells following the recommended transformation protocol provided with
the cells.
return to top of page
antibiotic stock solutions
100mg/ml
ampicillin in deionized water (sterile filtered)
25mg/ml
kanamycin; kanamycin sulfate in deionized water (sterile
filtered)
Store at –20°C.
Blue/Orange 6X Loading Dye
5X Flexi® Digest Buffer
50mM
Tris-HCl (pH 7.9 at 37°C)
2X Flexi® Ligase Buffer
60mM
Tris-HCl (pH 7.8 at 25°C)
Store in single-use aliquots at –20°C. Avoid multiple freeze-thaw
cycles.
IPTG stock solution (0.1M)
1.2g
isopropyl β-D-thiogalactopyranoside
Add deionized water to 50ml final volume. Filter sterilize and store at
4°C.
LB medium
Add deionized water to approximately 1L. Adjust pH to 7.5 with 10N NaOH and
autoclave. For LB plates, include 15g agar prior to autoclaving.
LB plates with antibiotic
Add 15g agar to 1 liter of LB medium. Autoclave. Allow the medium to cool to
50°C before adding ampicillin to a final concentration of 100µg/ml or kanamycin to
a final concentration of 30µg/ml, as appropriate for the acceptor
Flexi® Vector. Pour 30–35ml of medium into 85mm
petri dishes. Let the agar harden. Store at 4°C for up to 1 month or at room
temperature for up to 1 week.
LB plates with ampicillin/IPTG/X-Gal
Make the LB plates with ampicillin as described above, then supplement with
0.5mM IPTG and 80µg/ml X-Gal and pour the plates. Alternatively, spread 100µl of
100mM IPTG and 20µl of 50mg/ml X-Gal over the surface of an LB-ampicillin plate
and allow to absorb for 30 minutes at 37°C prior to use.
2M Mg2+ stock
Add distilled water to 100ml. Filter sterilize.
SOC medium (100ml)
0.5g
Bacto®-yeast extract
1ml
2M Mg2+ stock, filter-sterilized
1ml
2M glucose, filter-sterilized
Add Bacto®-tryptone,
Bacto®-yeast extract, NaCl and KCl to 97ml of distilled
water. Stir to dissolve. Autoclave and cool to room temperature. Add 2M
Mg2+ stock and 2M glucose, each to a final
concentration of 20mM. Bring the volume to 100ml with sterile, distilled water.
The final pH should be 7.0.
X-Gal (2ml)
100mg
5-bromo-4-chloro-3-indolyl-β-D-galactoside
Dissolve in 2ml N,N´-dimethyl-formamide. Cover with aluminum foil and store at
–20°C. Alternatively, use 50mg/ml X-Gal (Cat.#
V3941).
return to top of page
- Anderson, S. et al.
(1980) A short primer for sequencing DNA cloned in the single-stranded phage vector
M13mp2.
Nucleic Acids Res.
8, 1731–43.
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d(C15A15)-d(T15G15).
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(2004) Mutations in sticky lead to defective organization of the
contractile ring during cytokinesis and are enhanced by Rho
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fragments into pGEM®-T Vector Systems.
Promega Notes
71, 10–4.
- Le Gall, S.M. et al.
(2003) Regulated cell surface pro-EGF ectodomain shedding is a zinc
metalloprotease-dependent process.
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(2005) Importin α/β mediates nuclear transport of a mammalian circadian clock
component, mCRY2, together with mPER2, through a bipartite nuclear localization
signal.
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return to top of page
4-CORE, Flexi, GoTaq, HaloTag, MagneSil, pGEM and Wizard are registered trademarks
of Promega Corporation.
AccessQuick, AgarACE, GeneEditor, LigaFast, MULTI-CORE,
PinPoint, PureYield, Select96, pTARGET and
SoftLink are trademarks of Promega Corporation.
Bacto is a registered trademark of Difco Laboratories, Detroit, Michigan. Ficoll
is a registered trademark of GE Healthcare Bio-sciences. Gateway is a registered
trademark of Invitrogen Corporation.
Products may be covered by pending or issued patents or may have certain limitations. Please visit our web
site for more information.
All prices and specifications are subject to change without
prior notice.
Product claims are subject to change. Please contact
Promega Technical Services or access the Promega online catalog for the
most up-to-date information on Promega products.