Colony PCR movie

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  • Опубликовано: 9 июл 2024
  • Colony PCR - an under-appreciated time-and-resource saver in molecular biology. Basically, there’s a me-altered version of the protein (aka a construct) which I want to express (get cells to make for me), so I took the genetic instructions for that protein and stuck that recipe into a circular piece of DNA called a plasmid. That plasmid serves as a vector or “vehicle” for getting (and keeping) the protein instructions in bacterial cells. But before I try to get cells to make the protein, I want to make sure that the recipe got into the plasmid okay and there aren’t any typos. A technique called colony PCR can quickly tell me if my recipe likely got in there before I waste time and resources purifying the plasmid and sending it for sequencing if it’s bad.
    blog post: bit.ly/colonyPCRchat
    The plasmid vector has a selection marker - often an antibiotic resistance gene - so that if you grow the bacteria that should have it on food containing that antibiotic, only the bacteria that have the plasmid (and hence the resistance gene) are able to grow. These bacteria grow and replicate to form individual “colonies” on a bacterial plate. Each colony has lots of cells but they all have the same genetic makeup
    BUT this only tells you if the plasmid is inside the bacteria not if your gene is inside that plasmid. To answer this latter question, you can use PCR with cleverly designed primers. You have a few options and presence/size of the copied produces (which you can tell by agarose gel electrophoresis) can tell you different things:
    INSERT-SPECIFIC PRIMERS: both primers are in the INSERT (the gene you put in). This is a YES/NO for whether your insert’s present. If your gene’s not there there will be nothing for the primers to bind to ➞ no product. But if your gene is there the primers will latch on & Pol will copy between them ➔product (note that by product I mean a defined, specific product, not “nonspecific products” that can come from primers binding incorrectly (mispriming)
    🔹tells you if your gene is present BUT NOT if your gene is where you want it…
    🔹advantage is that you can use this same set of primers to test for your insert in different plasmids
    VECTOR-SPECIFIC PRIMERS: both primers are in the VECTOR, straddling the insertion site. As long as the plasmid’s present, you should get some sort of product, but it’s the SIZE of the product that gives you your answer (not a simple yes/no like above) - if your insert’s not in the vector the product will be really short but if your insert’s in there, the product should be bigger (that short length PLUS the length of your insert)
    🔹tells you if your gene (or something of that same size) is present IN YOUR VECTOR
    🔹useful because you can use the same pair of primers to test different constructs since the primers are specific for the vector not the insert
    🔹does NOT tell you whether your insert is inserted in the correct direction. for that you can use
    ORIENTATION-SPECIFIC PRIMERS: one primer is in the insert & the other is in the vector
    🔹you’ll only get a defined product if your gene if facing the right way (not put in backwards so that the “start making protein here” message on the plasmid is next to the “stop making protein here” message on the DNA
    🔹tells you 1) is your plasmid present 2) is your gene present 3) is your gene in your plasmid and 4) is your gene “backwards”
    🔹downside is you have to design a specific primer
    So we can use PCR as a secondary “screen” when cloning, but we still haven’t answered the question of how we get the DNA to screen. You can purify plasmid DNA out of bacteria - often using easy-to-use “mini prep kits” - they’re easy to use but if you have lots of bacteria to test, you don’t want to waste time purifying something “useless” so you can skip the purification (for now) and add a teeny bit of the whole bacterial cells into your PCR mix.
    Just barely touch the colony with a sterile toothpick or pipet tip & swirl it around a bit in your PCR mix. (alternatively, you can resuspend a bit of it (pipet it up in down in some water) and add some of this to the PCR mix.
    When the reaction heats up to MELT the DNA (separate the strands) it also LYSES the cells (breaks them open) so that the DNA “spills out” and DNA Pol can latch on.
    If you get a positive result, you can then go ahead and grow up more of that colony and purify it.
    Another “quick check” is an analytical restriction digest - more here: bit.ly/colonychecking
    BUT - with either of these methods, you still don’t know if there are any typos! (is the sequence correct?) Both restriction enzymes and colony PCR primers only require that the short stretches of DNA they recognize are there & typo-free but that’s like seeing that one word in a document is spelled correctly and then taking that as proof you didn’t make any typos anywhere else in the document.
    For definitive evidence, you turn to DNA sequencing bit.ly/sequenceclones
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