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Plasmid Isolation 
Plasmid …… Plasmid ! 
What is a plasmid ? 
How does its name come around ? 
Why do we have to isolate or purify it ?
Plasmid Early History 
Time-Line: 
1903: Walter S. Sutton and Theodor Boveri independently hypothesize that the 
units of Mendelian characters are physically located on chromosomes. 
Gregor Mendel 
(1822-1884) 
Paper in 1860 
Thomas H. Morgan 
1933, Nobel prize 
for his study of 
fruit flies 
1910: Thomas Hunt Morgan (1866-1945) describes association of 
genes with a specific chromosome in the nucleus of Drosophila. 
1920s-1940: Embryologists observe that there are hereditary 
determinants in the cytoplasm. 
1950s: reported that cytoplasmic hereditary units in yeast 
mitochondria, and in the chloroplast of Chlamydomonas .
Plasmid Early History continued 
1946 -1951: Joshua Lederberg et al., report strong evidence for a 
sexual phase in E. coli K-12. Meanwhile, lysogenic phages were 
also studied. 
1950-1952: William Hayes suggests that mating in E. coli is an 
asymmetric (unidirectional) process. 
1952: J. Lederberg reviews the literature on cell heredity and 
suggests the term "Plasmid" for all extrachromosomal hereditary 
determinants. 
1952-1953: W. Hayes, and J. Lederberg, Cavalli, and E. Lederberg 
report that the ability to mate is controlled by a factor (F) that seems 
to be not associated with the chromosome. 
( in the summer of 1952: James D. Watson described the event (The 
Double Helix )). 
Schematic drawing of 
bacterial conjugation. 
1, Chromosomal DNA. 
2, F-factor (Plasmids). 
3, Pilus.
Plasmid Early History continued 
1954: Pierre Fredéricq and colleagues show that colicine (plasmids) (large 
toxin proteins (50-70kD) ) behave as genetic factors independent of the 
chromosome. 
1958: François Jacob and Elie Wollman propose the term "Episome" to 
describe genetic elements such as F factor, colicine, and phage lambda, 
which can exist both in association with the chromosome and independent 
of it. 
1961: DNA (radioactive) labeling show that mating in bacteria is 
accompanied by transfer of DNA from the donor to the recipient. 
1962: In a review on episomes, Allan Campbell proposes the reciprocal 
recombination of circular episome DNA molecules with the chromosomal 
DNA. 
1962: Circular DNA is found to actually exist 
in the genome of the small phage phi-X174.
Work with Plasmid DNAs 
Isolation and Purification 
After 10 hrs centrifugation at 
100,000 rpm (450,000 xg), two 
distinct bands, corresponding to 
linear nuclear DNA above and 
circular mitochondrial DNA 
below, are visible under 
ultraviolet light. 
Banding of plasmids and 
chromosomal DNAs in CsCl-EtBr 
and in iodixanol-DAPI gradients. 
CsCl Gradient centrifugation or 
CsCl dye-bouyant density method
Plasmid Early History 
with the help of CsCl gradient method 
1963: Alfred Hershey shows that bacteriophage lambda can form circles in 
vitro by virtue of its "cohesive ends". 
Other circular DNAs - the E. coli genome and 
polyoma virus DNA are visualized as well. 
1967: R. Radloff, William Bauer, and J. Vinograd describe the CsCl dye-bouyant 
density method to separate closed circular DNA from open circles 
and linear DNA, thus facilitating the physical study of plasmids. 
1969: M. Bazarle and D. R. Helinski show that several colicine factors are 
homogeneous circular DNA molecules. 
By the end of the 1960s, both the genetic and physical nature of 
plasmids and cytoplasmic heredity had been known in detail and the 
"Modern Period" of Plasmid Research starts - recombinant DNA 
technology. 
1970s-80s: the Cytoplasmic mitochondrial and chloroplast DNAs in 
green algae and plants were continuously being studied and their 
circular forms of dsDNAs are not being visualized until very recently.
Circular Chloroplast DNAs 
Tobacco ctDNA, EMBO J. 1986 Chlamy ctDNA, Plant Cell 2002 
Chlamy 
reinhartii 
203kb 
2001
Now, what is a plasmid ? 
Let us restart with our current Understanding of Plasmids 
Plasmid is autonomously replicating, extrachromosomal circular DNA 
molecules, distinct from the normal chromosomal DNAs and nonessential for 
cell survival under nonselective conditions. 
Episome no longer in use. 
They usually occur in bacteria, sometimes in eukaryotic organisms (e.g., the 2- 
um-ring in yeast S. cerevisiae). 
Sizes: 1 to over 400 kb. 
Copy numbers: 1 - hundreds in a single cell, or even thousands of copies. 
Every plasmid contains at least one DNA sequence that serves as an 
origin of replication or ori (a starting point for DNA replication, independently 
from the chromosomal DNA). 
Schematic drawing of a bacterium 
with its plasmids. 
(1) Chromosomal DNA. (2) Plasmids
Types of Bacterial Plasmids 
Based on their function, there are five main classes: 
Fertility-(F)plasmids: they are capable of conjugation or mating. 
Resistance-(R) plasmids: containing antibiotic or drug resistant 
gene(s). Also known as R-factors, before the nature of plasmids was 
understood. 
Col-plasmids: contain genes that code for colicines, proteins that 
can kill other bacteria. 
Degrative plasmids: enable digestion of unusual substances, e.g., 
toluene or salicylic acid. 
Virulence plasmids: turn the bacterium into a pathogen. 
Plasmids can belong to more than one of these functional groups.
Antibiotic resistance 
ori 
Amp-R 
Kan-R 
Schematic drawing of a plasmid with antibiotic resistances 
R-plasmids often contain genes that confer a selective advantage 
to the bacterium hosts, e.g., the ability to make the bacterium 
antibiotic resistant. 
Some common antibiotic genes in plasmids: ampr, APH3’-II 
(kanamycin), tetR (tetracycline),catR (Chloramphenicol), specr 
(spectinomycin or streptomycin), hygr (hygromycin). 
Some antibiotics inhibit cell wall synthesis and others bind to 
ribosomes to inhibit protein synthesis
Development of Plasmid Vectors 
Plasmids serve as important tools in genetics and biochemistry labs, where 
they are commonly used to multiply or express particular genes. 
Plasmids used in genetic engineering are called vectors. 
Vectors are vehicles to transfer genes from one organism to another and 
typically contain a genetic marker conferring a phenotype. 
Most also contain a polylinker or multiple cloning site (MCS), with several 
commonly used restriction sites allowing easy insertion of DNA fragments 
at this location. 
Many plasmid vectors are commercially available. 
Old vector pBR322: 4.36kb, Ampicilin-R, Tetracylin-R, 15-20 copies/cell 
Old vectors pUC18/19: 2.69kb, Ampicilin-R, LacZ operon, 500-700 copies 
Stratagen pBS-KS: 3.0kb, Ampicilin-R, LacZ operon, 500-700 copies/cell 
Promega pGEM-T: 3.0 kb, Ampicilin-R, LacZ operon, 500-700 copies/cell 
Invitrogen TOPO-TA: 3.96kb, Ampicilin-R, Kan-R, LacZ, 500-700 copies 
pCAMBIA vectors: >10kb, Amp-R/Kan-R/Hyg-R, LacZ, 1-3 copies 
see more at http://seq.yeastgenome.org/vectordb/vector_pages/
Plasmid Vectors 
MCS
Application of Plasmid Vectors 
How it works? 
(a) Initially, the gene to be 
replicated is inserted in a 
plasmid or vector. 
(b) The plasmids are next 
inserted into bacteria by a 
process called 
transformation. 
(c) Bacteria are then grown on 
specific antibiotic(s). 
(d) As a result, only the bacteria 
with antibiotic resistance can 
survive and will be 
replicated. 
In Molecular Cloning
Application of Plasmid Vectors 
In Pharmaceutical and Agriculture Bioengineering 
One of the major uses of plasmids is to make large amounts of proteins. 
In this case, bacteria or other types of host cells can be induced to produce 
large amounts of proteins from the plasmid with inserted gene, just as the 
bacteria produces proteins to confer antibiotic resistance. This is a cheap 
and easy way of mass-producing a gene or the protein — for example, 
insulin, antibiotics, antobodies and vaccines. 
Green Algae 
for antibody 
production 
Transgenic 
Arabidopsis 
expressing 
GFP to 
study PDI 
functions
Future Maize Crop 
Two-pronged corn kernels 
could provide a double dose 
of protein 
D. Gallie/UC Riverside 
2004 
Inbred B73 & Teosinte 
Vitamin C 
enhanced 
Corn, 
Gallie/UC 
Riverside 
2003 
Molecular farming for potential medical use
Plasmid Isolation from Bacteria 
How to rapidly isolate plasmid? 
(a) Inoculation and harvesting the bacteria 
(b) lysis of the bacteria (heat, detergents 
(SDS or Triton-114), alkaline(NaOH)), 
(c) neutralization of cell lysate and 
separation of cell debris (by 
centrifugation), 
Or other 
cell types
Plasmid DNA Isolation continued 
Tranditional Midi Prep Mini Prep 
Ways 
(d) collecting plasmid 
DNA by centrifugation 
(after ethanol 
precipitation or through 
filters - positively 
charged silicon beads), 
(e) check plasmid DNA 
yield and quality (using 
spectrophotometer and 
gel electrophoresis). 
spectrophotometer and gel electrophoresis
DNA Electrophoresis 
The process using electro-field to separate macromolecules in a 
gel matrix is called electrophoresis. 
DNA, RNA and proteins carry negative charges, and migrate into gel matrix 
under electro-fields. 
The rate of migration for small linear fragments is directly proportional to 
the voltage applied at low voltages. 
At low voltage, the migration rate of small linear DNA fragments is a 
function of their length. 
At higher voltages, larger fragments (over 20kb) migrate at 
continually increasing yet different rates. 
Large linear fragments migrate at a certain fixed rate regardless of 
length. 
In all cases, molecular weight markers are very useful to monitor the 
DNA migration during electrophoresis.
Conformations of Plasmid DNAs 
Plasmid DNA may appear in the following 
five conformations: 
Super Coiled 
1) "Supercoiled" (or "Covalently Closed-Circular") 
DNA is fully intact with both strands uncut. 
2) "Relaxed Circular" DNA is fully intact, but 
"relaxed" (supercoils removed). 
3) "Supercoiled Denatured" DNA. small quantities 
occur following excessive alkaline lysis; both 
strands are uncut but are not correctly paired, 
resulting in a compacted plasmid form. 
Linear DNA 
SC 
Relaxed region 
Nicked DNAs 
4) "Nicked Open-Circular" 
DNA has one strand cut. 
5) "Linearized" DNA has both 
strands cut at only one site.
Conformation of Plasmid DNAs 
The relative electrophoretic mobility (speed) of these DNA 
conformations in a gel is as follows: 
Nicked Open Circular 
(slowest) 
Linear 
Relaxed Circular 
Supercoiled Denatured 
Supercoiled (fastest)
BHI RI 
mGFP4 
DNA Electrophoresis after Digestion 
mGFP 4 5ER SK KS 
BamHI 
EcoRI 
BamHI 
SacI 
BamHI 
EcoRI 
10kb 
3kb 
2kb 
1kb 
pBIN-mGFP4/5ER digestion pBS-SK 
10kb 
3kb 
2kb 
1kb 
End of the Section

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Plasmid isolation

  • 1. Plasmid Isolation Plasmid …… Plasmid ! What is a plasmid ? How does its name come around ? Why do we have to isolate or purify it ?
  • 2. Plasmid Early History Time-Line: 1903: Walter S. Sutton and Theodor Boveri independently hypothesize that the units of Mendelian characters are physically located on chromosomes. Gregor Mendel (1822-1884) Paper in 1860 Thomas H. Morgan 1933, Nobel prize for his study of fruit flies 1910: Thomas Hunt Morgan (1866-1945) describes association of genes with a specific chromosome in the nucleus of Drosophila. 1920s-1940: Embryologists observe that there are hereditary determinants in the cytoplasm. 1950s: reported that cytoplasmic hereditary units in yeast mitochondria, and in the chloroplast of Chlamydomonas .
  • 3. Plasmid Early History continued 1946 -1951: Joshua Lederberg et al., report strong evidence for a sexual phase in E. coli K-12. Meanwhile, lysogenic phages were also studied. 1950-1952: William Hayes suggests that mating in E. coli is an asymmetric (unidirectional) process. 1952: J. Lederberg reviews the literature on cell heredity and suggests the term "Plasmid" for all extrachromosomal hereditary determinants. 1952-1953: W. Hayes, and J. Lederberg, Cavalli, and E. Lederberg report that the ability to mate is controlled by a factor (F) that seems to be not associated with the chromosome. ( in the summer of 1952: James D. Watson described the event (The Double Helix )). Schematic drawing of bacterial conjugation. 1, Chromosomal DNA. 2, F-factor (Plasmids). 3, Pilus.
  • 4. Plasmid Early History continued 1954: Pierre Fredéricq and colleagues show that colicine (plasmids) (large toxin proteins (50-70kD) ) behave as genetic factors independent of the chromosome. 1958: François Jacob and Elie Wollman propose the term "Episome" to describe genetic elements such as F factor, colicine, and phage lambda, which can exist both in association with the chromosome and independent of it. 1961: DNA (radioactive) labeling show that mating in bacteria is accompanied by transfer of DNA from the donor to the recipient. 1962: In a review on episomes, Allan Campbell proposes the reciprocal recombination of circular episome DNA molecules with the chromosomal DNA. 1962: Circular DNA is found to actually exist in the genome of the small phage phi-X174.
  • 5. Work with Plasmid DNAs Isolation and Purification After 10 hrs centrifugation at 100,000 rpm (450,000 xg), two distinct bands, corresponding to linear nuclear DNA above and circular mitochondrial DNA below, are visible under ultraviolet light. Banding of plasmids and chromosomal DNAs in CsCl-EtBr and in iodixanol-DAPI gradients. CsCl Gradient centrifugation or CsCl dye-bouyant density method
  • 6. Plasmid Early History with the help of CsCl gradient method 1963: Alfred Hershey shows that bacteriophage lambda can form circles in vitro by virtue of its "cohesive ends". Other circular DNAs - the E. coli genome and polyoma virus DNA are visualized as well. 1967: R. Radloff, William Bauer, and J. Vinograd describe the CsCl dye-bouyant density method to separate closed circular DNA from open circles and linear DNA, thus facilitating the physical study of plasmids. 1969: M. Bazarle and D. R. Helinski show that several colicine factors are homogeneous circular DNA molecules. By the end of the 1960s, both the genetic and physical nature of plasmids and cytoplasmic heredity had been known in detail and the "Modern Period" of Plasmid Research starts - recombinant DNA technology. 1970s-80s: the Cytoplasmic mitochondrial and chloroplast DNAs in green algae and plants were continuously being studied and their circular forms of dsDNAs are not being visualized until very recently.
  • 7. Circular Chloroplast DNAs Tobacco ctDNA, EMBO J. 1986 Chlamy ctDNA, Plant Cell 2002 Chlamy reinhartii 203kb 2001
  • 8. Now, what is a plasmid ? Let us restart with our current Understanding of Plasmids Plasmid is autonomously replicating, extrachromosomal circular DNA molecules, distinct from the normal chromosomal DNAs and nonessential for cell survival under nonselective conditions. Episome no longer in use. They usually occur in bacteria, sometimes in eukaryotic organisms (e.g., the 2- um-ring in yeast S. cerevisiae). Sizes: 1 to over 400 kb. Copy numbers: 1 - hundreds in a single cell, or even thousands of copies. Every plasmid contains at least one DNA sequence that serves as an origin of replication or ori (a starting point for DNA replication, independently from the chromosomal DNA). Schematic drawing of a bacterium with its plasmids. (1) Chromosomal DNA. (2) Plasmids
  • 9. Types of Bacterial Plasmids Based on their function, there are five main classes: Fertility-(F)plasmids: they are capable of conjugation or mating. Resistance-(R) plasmids: containing antibiotic or drug resistant gene(s). Also known as R-factors, before the nature of plasmids was understood. Col-plasmids: contain genes that code for colicines, proteins that can kill other bacteria. Degrative plasmids: enable digestion of unusual substances, e.g., toluene or salicylic acid. Virulence plasmids: turn the bacterium into a pathogen. Plasmids can belong to more than one of these functional groups.
  • 10. Antibiotic resistance ori Amp-R Kan-R Schematic drawing of a plasmid with antibiotic resistances R-plasmids often contain genes that confer a selective advantage to the bacterium hosts, e.g., the ability to make the bacterium antibiotic resistant. Some common antibiotic genes in plasmids: ampr, APH3’-II (kanamycin), tetR (tetracycline),catR (Chloramphenicol), specr (spectinomycin or streptomycin), hygr (hygromycin). Some antibiotics inhibit cell wall synthesis and others bind to ribosomes to inhibit protein synthesis
  • 11. Development of Plasmid Vectors Plasmids serve as important tools in genetics and biochemistry labs, where they are commonly used to multiply or express particular genes. Plasmids used in genetic engineering are called vectors. Vectors are vehicles to transfer genes from one organism to another and typically contain a genetic marker conferring a phenotype. Most also contain a polylinker or multiple cloning site (MCS), with several commonly used restriction sites allowing easy insertion of DNA fragments at this location. Many plasmid vectors are commercially available. Old vector pBR322: 4.36kb, Ampicilin-R, Tetracylin-R, 15-20 copies/cell Old vectors pUC18/19: 2.69kb, Ampicilin-R, LacZ operon, 500-700 copies Stratagen pBS-KS: 3.0kb, Ampicilin-R, LacZ operon, 500-700 copies/cell Promega pGEM-T: 3.0 kb, Ampicilin-R, LacZ operon, 500-700 copies/cell Invitrogen TOPO-TA: 3.96kb, Ampicilin-R, Kan-R, LacZ, 500-700 copies pCAMBIA vectors: >10kb, Amp-R/Kan-R/Hyg-R, LacZ, 1-3 copies see more at http://seq.yeastgenome.org/vectordb/vector_pages/
  • 13. Application of Plasmid Vectors How it works? (a) Initially, the gene to be replicated is inserted in a plasmid or vector. (b) The plasmids are next inserted into bacteria by a process called transformation. (c) Bacteria are then grown on specific antibiotic(s). (d) As a result, only the bacteria with antibiotic resistance can survive and will be replicated. In Molecular Cloning
  • 14. Application of Plasmid Vectors In Pharmaceutical and Agriculture Bioengineering One of the major uses of plasmids is to make large amounts of proteins. In this case, bacteria or other types of host cells can be induced to produce large amounts of proteins from the plasmid with inserted gene, just as the bacteria produces proteins to confer antibiotic resistance. This is a cheap and easy way of mass-producing a gene or the protein — for example, insulin, antibiotics, antobodies and vaccines. Green Algae for antibody production Transgenic Arabidopsis expressing GFP to study PDI functions
  • 15. Future Maize Crop Two-pronged corn kernels could provide a double dose of protein D. Gallie/UC Riverside 2004 Inbred B73 & Teosinte Vitamin C enhanced Corn, Gallie/UC Riverside 2003 Molecular farming for potential medical use
  • 16. Plasmid Isolation from Bacteria How to rapidly isolate plasmid? (a) Inoculation and harvesting the bacteria (b) lysis of the bacteria (heat, detergents (SDS or Triton-114), alkaline(NaOH)), (c) neutralization of cell lysate and separation of cell debris (by centrifugation), Or other cell types
  • 17. Plasmid DNA Isolation continued Tranditional Midi Prep Mini Prep Ways (d) collecting plasmid DNA by centrifugation (after ethanol precipitation or through filters - positively charged silicon beads), (e) check plasmid DNA yield and quality (using spectrophotometer and gel electrophoresis). spectrophotometer and gel electrophoresis
  • 18. DNA Electrophoresis The process using electro-field to separate macromolecules in a gel matrix is called electrophoresis. DNA, RNA and proteins carry negative charges, and migrate into gel matrix under electro-fields. The rate of migration for small linear fragments is directly proportional to the voltage applied at low voltages. At low voltage, the migration rate of small linear DNA fragments is a function of their length. At higher voltages, larger fragments (over 20kb) migrate at continually increasing yet different rates. Large linear fragments migrate at a certain fixed rate regardless of length. In all cases, molecular weight markers are very useful to monitor the DNA migration during electrophoresis.
  • 19. Conformations of Plasmid DNAs Plasmid DNA may appear in the following five conformations: Super Coiled 1) "Supercoiled" (or "Covalently Closed-Circular") DNA is fully intact with both strands uncut. 2) "Relaxed Circular" DNA is fully intact, but "relaxed" (supercoils removed). 3) "Supercoiled Denatured" DNA. small quantities occur following excessive alkaline lysis; both strands are uncut but are not correctly paired, resulting in a compacted plasmid form. Linear DNA SC Relaxed region Nicked DNAs 4) "Nicked Open-Circular" DNA has one strand cut. 5) "Linearized" DNA has both strands cut at only one site.
  • 20. Conformation of Plasmid DNAs The relative electrophoretic mobility (speed) of these DNA conformations in a gel is as follows: Nicked Open Circular (slowest) Linear Relaxed Circular Supercoiled Denatured Supercoiled (fastest)
  • 21. BHI RI mGFP4 DNA Electrophoresis after Digestion mGFP 4 5ER SK KS BamHI EcoRI BamHI SacI BamHI EcoRI 10kb 3kb 2kb 1kb pBIN-mGFP4/5ER digestion pBS-SK 10kb 3kb 2kb 1kb End of the Section