| Literature DB >> 30349582 |
Matthew D Fischer1, Emmanuel Mgboji1, Zhongchi Liu1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Insertion of engineered DNA fragments into bacterial vectors is the foundation of recombinant DNA technology, yet existing methods are still laborious, require many steps, depend on specific vector configuration, or require expensive reagents.Entities:
Keywords: Cloning; Programmed reaction; Pyrite; Restriction digestion; Single tube
Year: 2018 PMID: 30349582 PMCID: PMC6192209 DOI: 10.1186/s13007-018-0359-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Plant Methods ISSN: 1746-4811 Impact factor: 4.993
Fig. 1Schematic diagram of Pyrite cloning and results. Diagram of Pyrite cloning. An intact plasmid vector and a DNA fragment (purified PCR product) with compatible restriction enzyme sites (RES1 and RES2) are incubated in a single tube together with the restriction enzymes (RE1 and RE2) and T4 DNA ligase. After the Pyrite reaction (incubation condition shown in box), the reaction can be directly transformed into E. coli without purification. Colony PCR will then screen for those colonies containing vectors with inserts
Fig. 2Determination of Pyrite cloning efficiency using colony PCR and blue-white screen. a Examples of colony PCR from three different reactions (i, ii, and iii), showing about 55% colonies (10/18; star) with the expected insert. “m” indicates marker lane (Goldbio 100 bp DNA ladder). Reaction i screened for insertion of F. vesca gene30478 CDS into pB42AD, reaction ii screened for insertion of F. vesca gene30478 CDS into pLexA, and reaction iii screened for insertion of F. vesca gene25060 CDS into pB42AD. b–g Blue-white colony screening used to determine the efficiency of the multiple applications of Pyrite cloning. Colonies are formed on antibiotic containing LB agar plates spread with X-gal and IPTG. b Control experiment showing 100% blue colonies after transformation of vector pUC19. c pUC19 was put into the Pyrite reaction to determine background re-ligation in the absence of DNA fragments. A smaller number of blue colonies was observed. d Pyrite reaction to insert F. vesca gene25060 CDS into pUC19. 100% white colonies were observed. e Pyrite cloning of gene25060 into pUC19 with SalI and BamHI-HF, a heat-resistant restriction enzyme, yielded 83% white colonies. f Simultaneous cloning of a F. vesca gene31413 into two vectors, pUC19 and pSanFran, in the same tube. The result of cloning gene31413 into pUC19 is shown. g Swapping eGFP from pSanFran to pUC19 with the Pyrite reaction, yielded 49.3% white colonies
Percentage of blue and white E. coli colonies resulting from various Pyrite cloning applications shown in Fig. 2
| Application type | Figure | Blue colonies | Total colonies | Percent blue | Percent white |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Background control | C | > 100 | > 100 | 100 | 0 |
| Insertion | D | 0 | > 100 | 0 | 100 |
| Use of BamHI | E | 78 | 458 | 17.0 | 83.0 |
| Simultaneous cloning (pUC19) | F | 0 | 202 | 0 | 100 |
| Simultaneous cloning (pSanFran) | n/a | n/a | 401 | n/a | 100 |
| Vector swap | G | 319 | 629 | 50.7 | 49.3 |
Fig. 3Multiple applications of Pyrite cloning. a Circularization/ligation of a linear DNA fragment. A PCR amplified linear vector can be cut and ligated using the Pyrite reaction. pLacZi was amplified with primers MF143 and MF144 and put in the Pyrite reaction with HindIII-HF, restoring the HindIII site in pLacZi. MF41 and MF126 are PCR primers used to test successful cloning. Three of the eight colonies tested were positive and marked by white stars. b Insertion of a DNA fragment into multiple destination vectors in a single reaction. The transformed cells can be plated on different antibiotic containing media to select for the desired vector. The gel image on the left shows the insertion of eGFP into two vectors simultaneously; the image on the right shows the insertion of gene31413 CDS into two vectors simultaneously. Red star indicates negative control (no template). Green stars indicate the vector pMerlin, which confers AmpR. Orange stars indicate the vector pSanFran, which confers SmR. “m” indicates marker lane (Goldbio 100 bp DNA ladder). c Restriction digestion of extracted plasmid DNA by EcoRI and SalI to release the cloned fragment. Proper insert and vector size confirmed colony PCR results. Arrows indicates the released insert of 817 bp and 727 bp respectively. Green star indicates vector that conferred AmpR (pMerlin). Orange star indicates vector that conferred SpecR (pSanfran). m indicates Goldbio 1 kb DNA ladder. d Insert swapping between vectors with different antibiotic resistances. Two successful examples are shown with 67–100% efficiency (positive PCR products marked by white stars). e A vector with an insert can revert to the empty vector by releasing the insert with the Pyrite reaction. Gene31413 CDS was removed from the pCR™8/GW/TOPO® vector with EcoRI-HF. All colonies screened contain the empty vector without an insert (blue stars)
Comparison of time investments to complete traditional cloning versus Pyrite cloning
| Step | Traditional cloning | Time investment | Pyrite cloning | Time investment |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1a | Digest vector | 1–24 h | Prepare and incubate reaction | 18–25 h |
| 1b | Digest insert(s) | 1–24 h | ||
| 2 | Gel electrophoresis | 15–45 min | Transform | 1–2 h |
| 3 | Gel purification | 1–2 h | ||
| 4 | Ligation reaction | 16 h | ||
| 5 | Deactivate ligase | 10 min | ||
| 6 | Transform | 1–2 h | ||
| Total steps | 6 | 2 | ||
| Total labor time | 2–4 h | 0.5–1 h | ||
| Total incubation time | 19–43 h | 19–26 h |