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Cloning Class Definitions: Clone: a plant or animal that is grown from one cell of its parent and that has exactly the same genes as its parent. Molecular cloning: a set of experimental methods in molecular biology that are used to assemble recombinant DNA molecules and to direct their replication within host organisms. Transformation: the genetic alteration of a cell resulting from the direct uptake and incorporation of exogenous genetic material (exogenous DNA) from its surroundings and taken up through the cell membrane(s). Plasmid: a small circle of DNA, typically found in bacteria, that is separate from the majority of bacterial DNA located in the nucleoid. Selection Marker: a novel trait conferred on the bacteria that allows you to select for successful transformants. Eg. Colorimetric or antibiotic resistance. Transforming Competent Cells Protocol (E. coli DH5α cells from Life Technologies) https://tools.thermofisher.com/content/sfs/manuals/subcloningefficiencydh5alpha_man.pdf 1. Thaw on ice one tube of DH5α™ cells. Place 1.5 ml microcentrifuge tubes on wet ice. 2. Gently mix cells with the pipette tip and aliquot 50 µl of cells for each transformation into a 1.5 ml microcentrifuge tube. 3. Refreeze any unused cells in the dry ice/ethanol bath for 5 minutes before returning to the -80°C freezer. Do not use liquid nitrogen. 4. Add 1 to 5 µl (1-10 ng) of DNA to the cells and mix gently. Do not mix by pipetting up and down. For the pUC19 control, add 2.5 µl (250 pg) of DNA to the cells and mix gently. 5. Incubate tubes on ice for 30 minutes. 6. Heat shock cells for 20 seconds in a 42°C water bath without shaking. 7. Place tubes on ice for 2 minutes. 8. Add 950 µl of pre-warmed medium of choice to each tube. 9. Incubate tubes at 37°C for 1 hour at 225 rpm. 10. Spread 20 µl to 200 µl from each transformation on pre-warmed selective plates. We recommend plating two different volumes to ensure that at least one plate will have well-spaced colonies. For the pUC19 control, plate 100 µl on an LB plate containing 100 µg/ml ampicillin. 11. Store the remaining transformation reaction at +4°C. Additional cells may be plated out the next day, if desired. 12. Incubate plates overnight at 37°C. What is cloning used for? We need cloning in order to conduct basic genetic manipulation. This particular technique, transformation, is used to get the DNA inside the bacteria and to produce multiple copies. Once the DNA is inside the bacteria, the bacteria will continuously amplify the DNA, given the correct sequences. On the one hand, this process allows us to cement our recombinant DNA, and on the other hand this process allows us to amplify the DNA so we have enough for downstream applications. So how does transformation work? Again, the whole process of transformation is getting the DNA inside the bacteria. The bacteria won’t readily uptake the DNA, so we have to prepare the bacteria first to coax it into taking up the DNA. There are two methods of coaxing the cell: The first is chemically competent transformation and the second is electroporation. The two methods are similar in their outcome but slightly different in their approach. The idea is that we need to make holes, or pores, in the membrane of the cell so the DNA has a greater chance to enter the cells. We are working with chemically competent cells. In order for the DNA to have a better chance of floating into the cell, we need to bring the DNA close to the cell membrane. However, the cell membrane is negatively charged and the DNA is negatively charged, so they naturally repel each other! In order to overcome this challenge, we incubate the cells with a Calcium Chloride (CaCl) salt. The positively charged Calcium ions will be attracted to the membrane and the DNA will be attracted to the Calcium ions, so we end up with a Membrane-Calcium-DNA sandwich! That way, when we heat shock the cells to create pores, the DNA will be very close and is much more likely to float in. Why do we incubate it at 37 degrees Celcius for an hour before plating them? The plate has an antibiotic on it that will kill everything without resistance to that specific antibiotic. The idea is that the bacteria cells do not have an innate resistance to the antibiotic so they would be killed upon contact. The plasmid DNA will usually contain a gene that will confer antibiotic resistance upon the cell, allowing the bacteria to survive in the presence of the specific antibiotic. However, once you transform the bacteria, the cell requires time to express the antibiotic resistance gene and build up resistance. If you were to plate the bacteria immediately, they would all die because they have not built up the resistance. That’s why you must grow the newly transformed cells first for an hour before plating them. What are the next steps? If you want to do more sophisticated genetic manipulation, you would isolate a colony from your plate (to get a pure genetic line), grow it up, isolate the plasmid DNA, and use it for further applications. The idea is that you can take multiple plasmids, digest (cut) them in specific ways, and ligate (paste) them together to develop new functions. For example, if you were to ligate together a gene that glowed green with a gene that detects arsenic and transform them into bacteria, you will have created a biosensor that glows green whenever the cell detects arsenic.