Restriction digestion monitors facilitate plasmid construction and PCR cloning
Author(s) -
R. D. Anand,
Odeniel Sertil,
Charles V. Lowry
Publication year - 2004
Publication title -
biotechniques
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.617
H-Index - 131
eISSN - 1940-9818
pISSN - 0736-6205
DOI - 10.2144/04366st03
Subject(s) - restriction enzyme , plasmid , cloning (programming) , restriction digest , cloning vector , restriction site , multiple cloning site , ligation , biology , molecular cloning , microbiology and biotechnology , vector (molecular biology) , dna , restriction fragment , computational biology , terminal restriction fragment length polymorphism , restriction map , recombinant dna , polymerase chain reaction , genetics , restriction fragment length polymorphism , computer science , gene , complementary dna , programming language
Plasmid construction by "forced" or "directional" ligation of fragments digested with two different restriction enzymes is highly efficient, except when inhibited digestion of one site favors vector recircularization. Such failures often result because incomplete double digestion is undetected in vector polylinkers or at terminal cloning sites on a PCR fragment. To test cleavage efficiency indirectly, a "monitor" plasmid is added to the digest. In a suitable monitor, the two test sites are separated by enough DNA (approximately 20% of full length) to distinguish the double digest from the failed single digest. To make this applicable to combinations of 32 popular cloning enzymes, we constructed a set of 4 monitors (pDM1, pDM2, pDM3, and pDM4). Each contains three polylinkers separated by stuffer segments of approximately 1 kb. The 32 sites are distributed in the polylinkers such that at least one plasmid in the set is diagnostic for each enzyme pair. The set is designed to be extended to up to 81 sites. A linearized version of the monitor allows for the determination of which of the two enzymes has failed in an incomplete double digest and is also useful when the target DNA is close to the size of the pDM backbone. The plasmids also serve as versatile self-monitoring cloning vectors for any site combination.
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