Scarless DNA Recombineering.

Cold Spring Harbor protocols(2023)

Cited 1|Views11
No score
Abstract
The method described here allows editing of the bacterial genome without leaving any secondary changes (scars) behind. This method uses a tripartite selectable and counterselectable cassette comprising an antibiotic-resistance gene ( or ) and the repressor gene linked to a P promoter- toxin gene fusion. In the absence of induction, the gene product represses the P promoter, preventing expression. The cassette is first inserted at the target site by selecting for chloramphenicol or kanamycin resistance. It is subsequently replaced by the sequence of interest by selecting for growth in the presence of anhydrotetracycline (AHTc), which inactivates the TetR repressor thereby causing CcdB-induced lethality. Unlike other CcdB-based counterselection schemes, which require specifically designed λ-Red delivery plasmids, the system described here uses the popular plasmid pKD46 as the source of λ-Red functions. This protocol allows a wide variety of modifications, including the intragenic insertion of fluorescent or epitope tags, gene replacements, deletions, and single base-pair substitutions, to be made. In addition, the procedure can be used to place the inducible P promoter at a chosen position in the bacterial chromosome.
More
Translated text
Key words
dna
AI Read Science
Must-Reading Tree
Example
Generate MRT to find the research sequence of this paper
Chat Paper
Summary is being generated by the instructions you defined