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CRISPR-Cas9
- DNA
染色体
DNA 检测和分离
DNA 相互作用
DNA 标记
DNA 定量
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DNA 测序
PCR
转座子
基因表达
基因图谱和克隆
基因组编辑
诱/突变
质粒
重组
+ RNA
转化
全基因组测序
+ 微生物新陈代谢
+ 微生物生理学
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+ 微生物信号传导
+ 病原体检测
往期刊物

Rapid Plasmid-Free Generation of Recombinant Positive-Strand RNA Viruses That Use IRES-Mediated Translation Using an Expansion of the Circular Polymerase Extension Reaction (CPER)

基于扩展型CPER的快速无质粒重组正链RNA病毒构建方法:适用于IRES介导翻译系统

HY Hirotaka Yamamoto
TT Tomokazu Tamura
TF Takausuke Fukuhara
2284 Views
Apr 20, 2025

Reverse genetics systems in virology are technologies used to generate recombinant viruses, enabling the manipulation of viral genes. Recombinant viruses facilitate the investigation of pathogenesis and the development of antivirals. In studies of positive-sense single-stranded RNA (ssRNA) viruses, a reverse genetics approach typically uses infectious viral cDNA clones derived from bacterial artificial chromosomes and plasmids or from the in vitro ligation of viral cDNA fragments. However, these methods are time-consuming, involve complex procedures, and do not always successfully generate recombinant viruses. Possible reasons for unsuccessful outcomes include i) viral sequences exhibiting toxicity in bacterial systems, ii) the duplication of viral genes observed in some strains, complicating the acquisition of correct cDNA clones, and iii) certain cell lines being highly susceptible to infection but difficult to transfect with nucleotides. For these reasons, a simple and rapid reverse genetics system is needed to accelerate research on ssRNA viruses. The circular polymerase extension reaction (CPER) method offers a solution by eliminating the need for molecular cloning in bacteria, enabling the generation of recombinant viruses over a shorter timeframe. This method has been widely adopted for the study of ssRNA viruses, including SARS-CoV-2 and flaviviruses. Recently, we expanded the CPER method for ssRNA viruses using internal ribosome entry site (IRES)-mediated translation. This protocol details the experimental procedures, using bovine viral diarrhea virus as an example—one of the most challenging viruses for generating viral cDNA clones because of the factors listed above.

Protocol to Mine Unknown Flanking DNA Using PER-PCR for Genome Walking

使用PER-PCR进行基因步移挖掘未知侧翼DNA的实验方案

ZY Zhou Yu
DW Dongying Wang
ZL Zhiyu Lin
HL Haixing Li
1607 Views
Feb 20, 2025

Genome walking, a molecular technique for mining unknown flanking DNAs, has a wide range of uses in life sciences and related areas. Herein, a simple but reliable genome walking protocol named primer extension refractory PCR (PER-PCR) is detailed. This PER-PCR-based protocol uses a set of three walking primers (WPs): primary WP (PWP), secondary WP (SWP), and tertiary WP (TWP). The 15 nt middle region of PWP overlaps the 3' region of SWP/TWP. The 5' regions of the three WPs are completely different from each other. In the low annealing temperature cycle of secondary or tertiary PER-PCR, the short overlap mediates the annealing of the WP to the previous WP site, thus producing a series of single-stranded DNAs (ssDNA). However, the 5' mismatch between the two WPs prevents the template DNA from synthesizing the WP complement at its 3' end. In the next high annealing temperature cycles, the target ssDNA is exponentially amplified because it is defined by both the WP and sequence-specific primer, while non-target ssDNA cannot be amplified as it lacks a binding site for at least one of the primers. Finally, the target DNA becomes the main PER-PCR product. This protocol has been validated by walking two selected genes.

Protocol to Identify Unknown Flanking DNA Using Partially Overlapping Primer-based PCR for Genome Walking

基于部分重叠引物的PCR基因组步移技术用于未知侧翼DNA的鉴定

MJ Mengya Jia
DD Dongqin Ding
XL Xiaohua Liu
HL Haixing Li
1510 Views
Feb 5, 2025

Genome walking is a popular molecular technique for accessing unknown flanking DNAs, which has been widely used in biology-related fields. Herein, a simple but accurate genome-walking protocol named partially overlapping primer (POP)-based PCR (POP-PCR) is described. This protocol exploits a POP set of three POPs to mediate genome walking. The three POPs have a 10 nt 3' overlap and 15 nt heterologous 5' regions. Therefore, a POP can partially anneal to the previous POP site only at a relatively low temperature (approximately 50 °C). In primary POP-PCR, the low-temperature (25 °C) cycle allows the primary POP to partially anneal to site(s) of an unknown flank and many sites of the genome, synthesizing many single-stranded DNAs. In the subsequent high-temperature (65 °C) cycle, the target single-stranded DNA is converted into double-stranded DNA by the sequence-specific primer, attributed to the presence of this primer complement, while non-target single-stranded DNA cannot become double-stranded because it lacks a binding site for both primers. As a result, only the target DNA is amplified in the remaining 65 °C cycles. In secondary or tertiary POP-PCR, the 50 °C cycle directs the POP to the previous POP site and synthesizes many single-stranded DNAs. However, as in the primary PCR, only the target DNA can be amplified in the subsequent 65 °C cycles. This POP-PCR protocol has many potential applications, such as screening microbes, identifying transgenic sites, or mining new genetic resources.

Protocol to Retrieve Unknown Flanking DNA Using Fork PCR for Genome Walking

利用叉式PCR进行基因组步移以扩增未知侧翼DNA的实验方案

HW Hongjing Wu
HP Hao Pan
HL Haixing Li
2554 Views
Jan 20, 2025

PCR-based genome walking is one of the prevalent techniques implemented to acquire unknown flanking genomic DNAs. The worth of genome walking includes but is not limited to cloning full-length genes, mining new genes, and discovering regulatory regions of genes. Therefore, this technique has advanced molecular biology and related fields. However, the PCR amplification specificity of this technique needs to be further improved. Here, a practical protocol based on fork PCR is proposed for genome walking. This PCR uses a fork primer set of three arbitrary primers to execute walking amplification task, where the primary fork primer mediates walking by partially annealing to an unknown flank, and the fork-like structure formed between the three primers participates in inhibiting non-target amplification. In primary fork PCR, the low-annealing temperature (25 °C) cycle allows the primary fork primer to anneal to many sites of the genome, synthesizing a cluster of single-stranded DNAs; the subsequent 65 °C cycle processes the target single-strand into double-strand via the site-specific primer; then, the remaining 65 °C cycles selectively enrich this target DNA. However, any non-target single-stranded DNA formed in the 25 °C cycle cannot be further processed in the following 65 °C cycles because it lacks an exact binding site for any primer. Secondary, or even tertiary nested fork PCR further selectively enriches the target DNA. The practicability of fork PCR was validated by walking three genes in Levilactobacillus brevis CD0817 and one gene in Oryza sativa. The results indicated that the proposed protocol can serve as a supplement to the existing genome walking protocols.

Detection of Pathogens and Ampicillin-resistance Genes Using Multiplex Padlock Probes

使用多重锁式探针检测病原体和氨苄西林耐药基因

Rick Conzemius Rick Conzemius
IB Ivan Barišić
10393 Views
Aug 20, 2017
Diagnostic assays for pathogen identification and characterization are limited either by the number of simultaneously detectable targets, which rely on multiplexing methods, or by time constraints due to cultivation-based techniques. We recently presented a 100-plex method for human pathogen characterization to identify 75 bacterial and fungal species as well as 33 clinically relevant β-lactamases (Barišić et al., 2016). By using 16S rRNA gene sequences as barcode elements in the padlock probes, and two different fluorescence channels for species and antibiotic resistance identification, we managed to cut the number of microarray probes needed by half. Consequently, we present here the protocol of an assay with a runtime of approx. 8 h and a detection limit of 105 cfu ml-1. A total of 89% of β-lactamases and 93.7% of species were identified correctly.

Promoter Orientation of Prokaryotic Phase-variable Genes by PCR

采用PCR进行原核细胞可变基因启动子定位

SB Stacey L. Bateman
PS Patrick Seed
10726 Views
Oct 20, 2012
One major mechanism of phase variable gene expression in prokaryotes is through inversion of the promoter element for a gene or operon. This protocol describes how to detect the promoter orientation of a phase-variable gene by PCR. This protocol, including primer design, is specific to detection of the promoter orientations of hyxR, a LuxR-like response regulator in Extraintestinal Pathogenic Escherichia coli (ExPEC) isolates (Bateman and Seed, 2012); however, this protocol can be generalized to other organisms and genes to discriminate prokaryotic promoter inversions by PCR through size discrimination of the amplification products. Expression of hyxR is regulated through bidirectional phase inversion of the upstream promoter region mediated by a member of the family of site-specific tyrosine recombinases called Fim-like recombinases. The recombinases recognize inverted DNA repeat sequences flanking the promoter and produce a genomic rearrangement, orientating the promoter in favor or disfavor of gene expression.