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Isolation of the Plasmid after Alkaline Lysis

     

The plasmid "miniprep " method is useful for preparing partially purified plasmid DNA in small quantities from a number of transformants. It relies on an alkaline SDS lysis to free the plasmid DNA from the cell, leaving behind the E. coli  chromosomal DNA with cell wall debris. The protocol described involves three basic steps: growth of bacteria and amplification of the plasmid; harvesting and lysis of the bacteria; and purification of the plasmid DNA.

These purification procedures exploit in one way or another the two major differences between Escherichia coli DNA and plasmid DNA:

  1. The E. coli chromosome is much larger than the DNA of plasmids used as vectors.
  2. The bulk of E. coli DNA extracted from cells is obtained as broken, linear molecules. By contrast, most plasmid DNA is extracted in a covalently closed, circular form.

The purification protocol therefore involves a differential precipitation step, in which the long strands of E. coli DNA, entangled in the remnants of lysed cells, are preferentially removed. Because each of the complementary strands of plasmid DNA is a covalently closed circle, the strands cannot be separated (without breaking one of them) by conditions such as exposure to mild alkali (up to pH 12.5), which break most of the hydrogen bonds of DNA. Closed circular molecules regain their native configuration when returned to neutral pH.E. coli remains in the denatured state. This methodgif provides enough purified plasmid DNA for sequencing.

  5 ml LB mediumgif were inoculated with a single bacterial colony. The tube was incubated at 37psy176 C overnight with vigorous shaking. 4.5 ml of the culture were centrifuged for 20 minutes at 3500 rpm at 4psy176 C. The remainder of the overnight culture was stored at 4psy176 C. The medium was removed, leaving the bacteria pellet as dry as possible. The pellet was resuspended in 150 tex2html_wrap_inline5128 l ice-cold Lysis buffer I (50 mM glucose, 10 mM EDTA, 25 mM Tris, pH 8.0) and stored for 5 minutes at room temperature. After adding 300 tex2html_wrap_inline5128 l freshly prepared Lysis buffer II (0.2 N NaOH, 1% SDS) and mixing by inversion, the mixture was incubated for 5 minutes on ice. Now 225 tex2html_wrap_inline5128 l ice-cold 3M KAc/5M HAc (pH 6.0) were added and mixed gently. The tube was stored on ice for 5 minutes, precipitating the chromosomal bacteria DNA. After centrifugation for 15 minutes at 13000 rpm at 4psy176 C, the supernatant was transferred to a fresh tube. Proteins were removed by vortexing with 400 tex2html_wrap_inline5128 l phenol (see section phenol), adding 300 tex2html_wrap_inline5128 l Sevac and centrifuging for 2 minutes at 13000 rpm.

500-600 tex2html_wrap_inline5128 l of the aqueous layer were removed and mixed with 1 ml ethanol to precipitate the DNA (see section EtOH). After incubating for 5 minutes at room temperature, the Eppendorf tube was centrifuged for 10 minutes at 13000 rpm at 4psy176 C. The supernatant was removed, the pellet washed with 70% ethanol and recentrifuged. After vacuum drying, 50 tex2html_wrap_inline5128 l of TE (pH 8.0) were added. After addition of 1.5 tex2html_wrap_inline5128 l RNase A (10mg/ml), the mixture was incubated for 20 minutes at room temperature to remove RNA. The positive result of the miniprep  was guaranteed by analytical digest with EcoRI of a 5 tex2html_wrap_inline5128 l sample.


next up previous contents index
Next: Sequencing Up: Transformation of Bacteria Previous: Transformation of Competent DH5

Alexander Binder
Wed Jan 15 03:01:31 MET 1997