License: This is an open access protocol distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited
Protocol status: Working
We use this protocol and it's working
Created: October 05, 2022
Last Modified: October 06, 2022
Protocol Integer ID: 70896
Disclaimer
DISCLAIMER – FOR INFORMATIONAL PURPOSES ONLY; USE AT YOUR OWN RISK
The protocol content here is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal, medical, clinical, or safety advice, or otherwise; content added to protocols.io is not peer reviewed and may not have undergone a formal approval of any kind. Information presented in this protocol should not substitute for independent professional judgment, advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Any action you take or refrain from taking using or relying upon the information presented here is strictly at your own risk. You agree that neither the Company nor any of the authors, contributors, administrators, or anyone else associated with protocols.io, can be held responsible for your use of the information contained in or linked to this protocol or any of our Sites/Apps and Services.
Abstract
Colony PCR using the whole organism of bacteria instead of purified DNA template. This simplifies PCR procedure. This protocol helps conduct a simple colony PCR procedure.
Materials
Your LB agar plate with colonies of transformed E. coli, TE solution, PCR buffer, dNTP stock solution, Forward Primer
Reverse Primer, Taq DNA polymerase
Preparation for experiment
Preparation for experiment
2d
2d
Pick several colonies of bacteria from the plate using pipette tips.
Put the selected colonies into different 15mL centrifuge tubes, each with 5 mLLB broth.
Incubate in an orbital shaker at 171 rpm, 37°C overnight.
Pipette 30 µL culture from each tube to different agar plates. Spread the culture evenly on the plate.
Incubate the plates in a biochemical incubator at 37 °C overnight.
Note
These steps help obtain adequate (and genetically pure) colonies for testing and research in the future.
Prepare several sterilized 1.5ml microcentrifuge tubes.
Note
If you have X samples to test, prepare X+2 tubes at least. You may prepare more in case you make mistakes.
Colony PCR
Colony PCR
5m
5m
Add 30 µL TE buffer to X+2 1.5ml microcentrifuge tubes each. Label the tubes as "1, 2, 3, ..., X, +, -".
Note
"+" tube means the positive control group and "-" tube means the negative control group.
Pick one colony from each plate go to step #5。 using a sterilized pipette tip and put the colonies into different 1.5ml microcentrifuge tubes numbered "1, 2, 3, ..., X"
Place the tubes in a heating block, heating at 100 °C for 00:05:00.
5m
Prepare Master Mix for colony PCR. The recipe for the Master Mix is as follows:
Note
Keep all PCR reagents on ice.
If you have Y reactions, prepare Master Mix for Y+1 reactions.
This means if you have X samples, you need to prepare X+3 reactions for X samples, one positive control, one negative control and another portion in case of pipette inaccuracies.