Haynes:Assembly101

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Model Procedure for Assembling Parts: Classic Ligation for Beginners
or, Cloning Sensei's Guide For the Aspiring Cloning Ninja

by Karmella Haynes, 2012


When I was a postdoc in Pam Silver's lab at Harvard (2008 - 2011), my lab mates and I generated large numbers of BioBrick assemblies so rapidly, and perhaps stealthily, that one of our colleagues in the department referred to us as "cloning ninjas." This guide is based on the MIT Registry of Standard Biological Parts suggested approach, which I've modified to make ligation-based assembly as quick and painless as possible. Let's begin.



A. Growing a Bacterial (E. coli) Culture

Escherichia coli (K-12 and related strains) is a common lab strain that is used for molecular cloning. BioBrick plasmids are usually stored in E. coli that are suspended in a glycerol solution and frozen at -80°C. When E. coli are grown at 37°C, they divide once about every 20 minutes. As the bacteria multiply via mitosis, they are making more copies of the plasmid you want.

Day 1: Making streaks from glycerol stocks

  1. Warm an agar plate at 37°C for at least 20 min.
  2. Label the plate with the bacterial strain name (e.g., DH5α), the antibiotic, the BioBrick part(s) name, your initials, and the date.
  3. Locate the desired -80°C glycerol stock. Use a sterile wooden toothpick to scrape up a tiny bit of the frozen bacteria and streak the plate.
  4. Incubate the plate at 37°C overnight to grow the bacteria.


Day 2: Growing liquid cultures

  1. Label 15 ml sterile culture tube(s) appropriately. Fill each tube with 5 ml of LB growth medium + appropriate antibiotic (e.g., 100 μg/ml ampicillin).
  2. Using a sterile pipette tip, touch the bacterial streak (or pick up a single colony) and put the tip into the LB medium (bacterial end down).
  3. Grow the cultures overnight in a shaking 37°C incubator.