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. 1976 Nov;73(11):3838-42.
doi: 10.1073/pnas.73.11.3838.

Biochemical construction of specific chimeric plasmids from ColE1 DNA and unfractionated Escherichia coli DNA

Biochemical construction of specific chimeric plasmids from ColE1 DNA and unfractionated Escherichia coli DNA

C J Collins et al. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 1976 Nov.

Abstract

A series of chimeric plasmids was constructed using colicinigenic factor E1 (ColE1) DNA as the replicon and DNA fragments carrying the galactose or tryptophan operons from E. coli. Restriction endonuclease EcoRI digests of ColE1 DNA and various DNAs containing the trp or gal operons were joined by T4 polynucleotide ligase [polynucleotide synthetase (ATP), poly(deoxyribonucleotide):poly(deoxyribonucleotide) ligase (AMP-forming), EC 6.5.1.1]. Chimeric plasmids carrying the desired genes were selected after transformation of Trp- or Gal- cells with ligated DNA. By using this method, we constructed ColE1-gal and ColE1-trp chimeric plasmids in which the source of the bacterial gal and trp operons was an unfractionated EcoRI digest of total E. coli DNA. The frequency of recovery of such chimeric plasmids is 10 to 20 colonies per mug of ligated DNA used in the transformation step. The method utilized in this report for constructing specific chimeric plasmids from total E. coli DNA is very simple. It requires only endonuclease R-EcoRI and T4 polynucleotide ligase, both of which are commercially available. The yield of transformants suggests that this method will be useful for cloning and amplifying a wide variety of functionally defined genes from E. coli and other prokaryotic organisms.

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References

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