Making construction plasmid

Construction plasmid is pre-cut backbone plasmid DNA from the three different plasmid backbones used for three antibiotic assembly (pSB1AC3, pSB1AK3, and pSB1AT3). It is cut with EcoRI and PstI, and ready for use in three way ligation reactions. Ideally, it is free of inserts and uncut plasmid. There are several ways to make construction plasmids. Our original approach was to use plasmid containing the P1010 insert, coding for the ccdB protein generator. This protein product is toxic to cells not having the gyrA462 mutation (most strains except for DB3.1). As a result, uncut or religated plasmid would produce little background. In our experience, this approach has a number of difficulties. Extraction of cut backbone from inserts required the use of gel purification, which is difficult with high concentrations of DNA, and problematic in yield and quality. The P1010 insert also showed remarkable ability to mutate (usually by frame shift) to a form not toxic to normal cells, leading to significant background.

Our revised approach is to build construction plasmid using PCR techniques. Using primers which match the biobrick cloning sites in the reverse orientation, we produce PCR product containing the plasmid backbone with no insert and no uncut, circular plasmid. Errors are introduced in this PCR process, but the errors are of two forms: ones which result in plasmids which cannot be transformed, and those which produce viable, but mutated plasmid backbone. In either case, we don't care, since the insert sequence is what we care about.

The PCR product is cut with EcoRI and PstI, purified away from the short dsDNA fragments cut off, and used for assemblies. Since the quality of this construction plasmid is a key determiner in the success of three antibiotic cloning, substantial effort has been put into optimizing the reactions. This protocol describes the exact procedures and quality control techniques used to make the construction plasmid backbones.

Materials

 * Template DNA for the backbone of choice (any plasmid with the correct backbone) at 10 ng/&mu;l concentration.
 * Invitrogen PCR Supermix High Fidelity (Invitrogen 10790-020)
 * Primer Suffix-F, sequence actagtagcggccgctgcag at 30 pmol/&mu;l
 * Primer Prefix-R, sequence tctagaagcggccgcgaattc at 30 pmol/&mu;l


 * 10x proteinase K digestion mix
 * 500 &mu;g/ml proteinase K  (50 &mu;l of a 10 mg/ml solution)
 * 80 mM EDTA (160 &mu;l of a 500 mM solution)
 * 5% SDS (250 &mu;l of a 20% solution)
 * water (540 &mu;l to bring to 1 ml)
 * Store at -20 C


 * Phenol/chloroform/isoamyl alcohol (pH 7.5, buffered, Sigma P3803)
 * 0.6 ml thick walled eppendorf tubes (thin ones will not work)
 * Chloroform/isoamyl alcohol (Sigma C0549)
 * Sodium acetate 3M pH 5.2
 * Pellet paint NF (Novagen 70748)
 * ice cold absolute ethanol
 * 70% ethanol, room temperature
 * TE or 10 mM Tris-HCl pH 7.5

PCR reaction
Mix a PCR reaction consisting of:
 * 300 &mu;l PCR supermix
 * 6 &mu;l each primer
 * 0.5 &mu;l template DNA
 * Aliquot into 100 &mu;l samples for the cycler

Run this PCR program:
 * 1) initial denaturing 95 C for 5 minutes
 * 2) denature 94 C for 30 s
 * 3) anneal 55 C for 30 s
 * 4) extend 68 C for 4 minutes
 * 5) cycle 36 times to step 2
 * 6) final extension 68 C for 10 minutes
 * 7) hold at 4 C indefinitely

Proteinase K digestion
''The purpose of this step is to degrade any remaining polymerase enzymes. This improves cloning efficiency when starting from PCR products Crowe91.
 * 1) consolidate 300 &mu;l sample into a single tube
 * 2) add 33 &mu;l of the 10x Proteinase-K digestion mix
 * 3) incubate at 50 C for 1 hour
 * 4) denature the proteinase K at 70 C for 15 minutes

Phenol chloroform extraction

 * 1) split the digestion equally into two thick walled 0.6 ml eppendorf tubes (thin tubes will fail catastrophically at high speed in the centrifuge)
 * 2) add 150 &mu;l Phenol/chloroform/isoamyl alcohol (caution!) to each tube (pipet from the bottom layer of the bottle, avoiding the top buffer layer)
 * 3) vortex thoroughly and spin 1 minute at 8000g
 * 4) remove most of the bottom layer of phenol/chloroform by pipetting from the bottom layer
 * 5) carefully pipet the top layer into a second set of 0.6 ml thick wall tubes, avoiding the phenol/chloroform layer
 * 6) add 150 &mu;l  chloroform/isoamyl alcohol to each tube
 * 7) vortex thoroughly and spin 1 minute at 8000g
 * 8) remove most of the bottom layer of chloroform by pipetting from the bottom layer
 * 9) carefully pipet the top layer into a third set of 0.6 ml tubes, avoiding the chloroform layer
 * 10) add 15 &mu;l sodium acetate 3M pH 5.2 to each tube
 * 11) Add 1 &mu;l Pellet paint NF to each tube
 * 12) Add 400 &mu;l ice cold absolute ethanol to each tube
 * 13) vortex and place in the -80 freezer for 1/2 hour until a gel like consistency forms
 * 14) remove from the freezer and spin at the highest available speed for 20 minutes, forming a visible blue pellet
 * 15) remove the supernatant, spin briefly again, and remove residual supernatant with a 10 &mu;l pipet tip
 * 16) Add 500 &mu;l 70% ethanol
 * 17) vortex, spin again at high speed to re-pellet the DNA
 * 18) remove the supernatant, spin briefly again, and remove residual supernatant  with a 10 &mu;l pipet tip
 * 19) allow the pellet to dry briefly (10 minutes, until the alcohol smell is gone) redissolve the pellet in 100 &mu;l TE or 10 mM Tris-HCl pH 7.5
 * 20) measure the DNA concentration on a Nanodrop.  Expect 400-500 ng/&mu;l or a total of approximately 80 &mu;g of DNA.