Team:Cambridge/Protocols/Gibson Assembly
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===Theory=== | ===Theory=== | ||
+ | Gibson Assembly as a scar free method of DNA recombination that is highly efficient and readily copes with combination of multiple DNA fragments at once. | ||
+ | The reaction relies on a temperature sensitive exonuclease known as T5, sets of primers with tails and a highly processive polymerase called phusion polymerase. | ||
+ | |||
+ | The reaction starts at 0 degrees C, | ||
===Practice=== | ===Practice=== |
Revision as of 15:38, 12 July 2011
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Gibson Assembly
Theory
Gibson Assembly as a scar free method of DNA recombination that is highly efficient and readily copes with combination of multiple DNA fragments at once.
The reaction relies on a temperature sensitive exonuclease known as T5, sets of primers with tails and a highly processive polymerase called phusion polymerase.
The reaction starts at 0 degrees C,
Practice
Master Mix for Gibson Assembly
Reagent | Volume/µl | ||
---|---|---|---|
Taq ligase (40u/µl) | 50 | ||
5x isothermal buffer | 100 | ||
T5 exonuclease (1u/µl) | 2 | ||
Phusion polymerase (2u/µl) | 6.25 | ||
Nuclease-free water | 216.75 | Total | 375 |
Master Mix is 1.33x concentrated
In order to join 3 fragments together add 1µl of each fragment (previously amplified by PCR) to a PCR tube along with 9µl of the master mix above.
Safety