A novel combined method for cost-benefit production of DNA ladders
Author(s) -
Hossein Khanahmad,
Saied Mostaan,
Mehdi Ajorloo,
Reza Ahangari Cohan,
ZahraRikhtegaran Tehrani,
Maryam Rezaei,
Fateme Fazeli,
Mahdi Behdani,
SakinehKarimi Zare,
Zeinab Karimi,
SayedHamidreza Mozhgani,
Rasul Moukhah
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
advanced biomedical research
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2277-9175
DOI - 10.4103/2277-9175.148298
Subject(s) - insert (composites) , plasmid , restriction enzyme , restriction digest , polymerase chain reaction , dna , microbiology and biotechnology , molecular cloning , recombinant dna , biology , cloning (programming) , multiple displacement amplification , in silico pcr , dna extraction , genetics , gene , multiplex polymerase chain reaction , complementary dna , materials science , computer science , composite material , programming language
Background: Molecular deoxyribonucleic acid markers are one of the most important tools in molecular biology labs. The size of DNA molecule is determined by comparing them with known bands of markers during gel electrophoresis. In this study, we have suggested an efficient strategy to produce molecular weight markers in an industrial scale. Materials and Methods: A combination of two previously known methods, restriction enzyme digestion and polymerase chain reaction (PCR), was used. The enzymatic digestion process was based on designing and constructing plasmids which equaled in size with the bands of ladder and produce the DNA fragment by plasmid linearization through digestion. In the PCR method, the DNA fragments with length 102 bp lesser than the related bands in DNA ladder are amplified by PCR and cloned in pTZ57T/A cloning vector. Then, PCRs with forward and reverse 100-bp primers on the resulting plasmids amplify the ladder fragments. F100 and R100 primers bind to the backbone of pTZ57R (without insert) and amplify a 100-bp PCR product. PCR on the plasmid with insert amplifies DNA fragment with 102+ insert length bp size. Results: Upon application of this strategy, 2000-10,000 bp DNA fragments were produced by enzymatic digestion of plasmids of the same size. Moreover, 100-1500 bp fragments were produced during PCR using only a set of forward and reverse (100 bp) primers.Conclusion: The highest advantage of this cost-benefit approach is to produce different types of molecular weight markers by using an effective and short protocol
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