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Pgem-T and Pgem-T Easy Vector Systems Protocol

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TECHNICAL MANUAL

pGEM-T and pGEM-T


Easy Vector Systems
Instrucons for Use of Products
A1360, A1380, A3600 and A3610

Revised 12/10
TM042

pGEM-T and pGEM-T Easy


Vector Systems
All technical literature is available at: www.promega.com/protocols/
Visit the web site to verify that you are using the most current version of this Technical Manual.
E-mail Promega Technical Services if you have questions on use of this system: techserv@promega.com

1. Introduction ....................................................................................................................................... 2
1.A. Vector Features .......................................................................................................................... 2
1.B. Important Considerations for Successful T-Vector Cloning ............................................................. 2
2. Product Components and Storage Conditions ........................................................................................ 3
3. Protocol for Ligations Using the pGEM-T and pGEM-T Easy Vectors and the 2X Rapid Ligation Buer .. 4
3.A. Ligation Protocol ........................................................................................................................ 4
3.B. Optimizing Insert:Vector Molar Ratios ......................................................................................... 5
4. Transformations Using the pGEM-T and pGEM-T Easy Vector Ligation Reactions ................................ 6
4.A. Transformation Protocol ............................................................................................................. 6
4.B. Example of Transformation Eciency Calculation ......................................................................... 7
4.C. Screening Transformants for Inserts ............................................................................................ 8
5. pGEM-T and pGEM-T Easy Vector Sequences, Multi-Cloning Sites and Circle Maps ............................. 8
5.A. Sequence and Multi-Cloning Site of the pGEM-T Vector ............................................................... 8
5.B. pGEM-T Vector Map and Sequence Reference Points ................................................................... 9
5.C. Sequence and Multi-Cloning Site of the pGEM-T Easy Vector ..................................................... 10
5.D. pGEM-T Easy Vector Map and Sequence Reference Points ......................................................... 11
6 General Considerations for PCR Cloning ............................................................................................. 12
6.A. PCR Product Purity................................................................................................................... 12
6.B. Properties of Various Thermostable Polymerases ........................................................................ 12
6.C. Cloning Blunt-Ended PCR Products ........................................................................................... 13
7. Experimental Controls....................................................................................................................... 15
8. Troubleshooting................................................................................................................................ 16
9. References ........................................................................................................................................ 20
10. Appendix .......................................................................................................................................... 20
10.A. pGEM-T Vector Restriction Enzyme Sites ................................................................................. 20
10.B. pGEM-T Easy Vector Restriction Enzyme Sites .......................................................................... 22
10.C. Composition of Buers and Solutions ......................................................................................... 24
10.D.Related Products ...................................................................................................................... 25

Promega Corporaon 2800 Woods Hollow Road Madison, WI 53711-5399 USA Toll Free in USA 800-356-9526 608-274-4330 Fax 608-277-2516
www.promega.com
TM042 Revised 12/10

1.

Introduction

1.A. Vector Features


T-Overhangs for Easy PCR Cloning: The pGEM-T and pGEM-T Easy Vectors(a,b) are linearized vectors with a
single 3-terminal thymidine at both ends. The T-overhangs at the insertion site greatly improve the eciency of
ligation of PCR products by preventing recircularization of the vector and providing a compatible overhang for PCR
products generated by certain thermostable polymerases (1,2).
Blue/White Selection of Recombinants: The pGEM-T and pGEM-T Easy Vectors are high-copy-number vectors
containing T7 and SP6 RNA polymerase promoters anking a multiple cloning region within the -peptide coding
region of the enzyme -galactosidase. Insertional inactivation of the -peptide allows identication of recombinants by
blue/white screening on indicator plates.
Choice of Restriction Sites for Release of Insert: Both the pGEM-T and pGEM-T Easy Vectors contain
numerous restriction sites within the multiple cloning region. The pGEM-T Easy Vector multiple cloning region is
anked by recognition sites for the restriction enzymes EcoRI, BstZI and NotI, providing three single-enzyme
digestions for release of the insert. The pGEM-T Vector cloning region is anked by recognition sites for the enzyme
BstZI. Alternatively, a double-digestion may be used to release the insert from either vector.
Rapid Ligation: The pGEM-T and pGEM-T Easy Vector Systems are supplied with 2X Rapid Ligation Buer.
Ligation reactions using this buer may be incubated for 1 hour at room temperature. The incubation period may be
extended to increase the number of colonies after transformation. Generally, an overnight incubation at 4C produces
the maximum number of transformants.
1.B. Important Considerations for Successful T-Vector Cloning
Avoid introduction of nucleases, which may degrade the T-overhangs on the vector. Use only the T4 DNA Ligase
provided with the system, as this has been tested for minimal exonuclease activity. Use sterile, nuclease-free water in
your ligation reactions.
Use high-eciency competent cells (1 108cfu/g DNA) for transformations. The ligation of fragments
with a single-base overhang can be inecient, so it is essential to use cells with a transformation eciency of at least
1 108cfu/g DNA in order to obtain a reasonable number of colonies. However, use of super high-eciency
competent cells (e.g., XL10 Gold Cells) may result in a higher background of blue colonies.
Limit exposure of your PCR product to shortwave UV light to avoid formation of pyrimidine dimers. Use a glass
plate between the gel and UV source. If possible, only visualize the PCR product with a long-wave UV source.

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TM042 Revised 12/10
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2.

Product Components and Storage Conditions

PRODUCT

pGEM-T Vector System I

SIZE

C A T. #

20 reacons

A3600

Includes:

1.2g pGEM-T Vector (50ng/l)


12l Control Insert DNA (4ng/l)
100u T4 DNA Ligase
200l 2X Rapid Ligation Buer, T4 DNA Ligase

PRODUCT

pGEM-T Vector System II

SIZE

C A T. #

20 reacons

A3610

Includes:

1.2g
12l
100u
200l
1.2ml

pGEM-T Vector (50ng/l)


Control Insert DNA (4ng/l)
T4 DNA Ligase
2X Rapid Ligation Buer, T4 DNA Ligase
JM109 Competent Cells, High Eciency (6 200l)

PRODUCT

pGEM-T Easy Vector System I

SIZE

C A T. #

20 reacons

A1360

SIZE

C A T. #

20 reacons

A1380

Includes:

1.2g pGEM-T Easy Vector (50ng/l)


12l Control Insert DNA (4ng/l)
100u T4 DNA Ligase
200l 2X Rapid Ligation Buer, T4 DNA Ligase

PRODUCT

pGEM-T Easy Vector System II

Includes:

1.2g
12l
100u
200l
1.2ml

pGEM-T Easy Vector (50ng/l)


Control Insert DNA (4ng/l)
T4 DNA Ligase
2X Rapid Ligation Buer, T4 DNA Ligase
JM109 Competent Cells, High Eciency (6 200l)

Storage Conditions: For Cat.# A3610, A1380, store the Competent Cells at 70C. Store all other components at
20C.

Promega Corporaon 2800 Woods Hollow Road Madison, WI 53711-5399 USA Toll Free in USA 800-356-9526 608-274-4330 Fax 608-277-2516
www.promega.com
TM042 Revised 12/10

3.

Protocol for Ligations Using the pGEM-T and pGEM-T Easy Vectors and the 2X Rapid Ligation
Buer

3.A. Ligation Protocol


1.

Briey centrifuge the pGEM-T or pGEM-T Easy Vector and Control Insert DNA tubes to collect the contents
at the bottom of the tubes.

2.

Set up ligation reactions as described below.


Note: Use 0.5ml tubes known to have low DNA-binding capacity (e.g., VWR Cat.# 20170-310).
Vortex the 2X Rapid Ligation Buer vigorously before each use.

3.

Mix the reactions by pipetting. Incubate the reactions for 1 hour at room temperature.
Alternatively, if the maximum number of transformants is required, incubate the reactions overnight at 4C.
Standard
Reaction

Positive
Control

Background
Control

5l

5l

5l

pGEM -T or pGEM -T Easy Vector (50ng)

1l

1l

1l

PCR product

Xl*

2l

Reaction Component
2X Rapid Ligation Buer, T4 DNA Ligase

Control Insert DNA


T4 DNA Ligase (3 Weiss units/l)
nuclease-free water to a nal volume of

1l

1l

1l

10l

10l

10l

*Molar ratio of PCR product:vector may require optimization.


Notes:
1.

Use only the T4 DNA Ligase supplied with this system to perform pGEM-T and pGEM-T Easy Vector
ligations. Other commercial preparations of T4 DNA ligase may contain exonuclease activities that may remove
the terminal deoxythymidines from the vector.

2.

2X Rapid Ligation Buer contains ATP, which degrades during temperature uctuations. Avoid multiple freezethaw cycles and exposure to frequent temperature changes by making single-use aliquots of the buer.

3.

Longer incubation times will increase the number of transformants. Generally, incubation overnight at 4C will
produce the maximum number of transformants.

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TM042 Revised 12/10
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4.

An aliquot of the PCR reaction should be analyzed on an agarose gel before use in the ligation reaction to verify
that the reaction produced the desired product. The PCR product to be ligated can be gel-puried or puried
directly from the PCR amplication using the Wizard SV Gel and PCR Clean-Up System (Cat.# A9281). Cleanup of reactions prior to ligation is recommended to remove primer dimers or other undesired reaction products,
and to improve ligation eciency. Exposure of PCR products to shortwave ultraviolet light should be minimized
in order to avoid the formation of pyrimidine dimers.

3.B. Optimizing Insert:Vector Molar Ratios


The pGEM-T and pGEM-T Easy Vector Systems have been optimized using a 1:1 molar ratio of the Control Insert
DNA to the vectors. However, ratios of 8:1 to 1:8 have been used successfully. If initial experiments with your PCR
product are suboptimal, ratio optimization may be necessary. Ratios from 3:1 to 1:3 provide good initial parameters.
The concentration of PCR product should be estimated by comparison to DNA mass standards on a gel or by using a
uorescent assay (3). The pGEM-T and pGEM-T Easy Vectors are approximately 3kb and are supplied at 50ng/l.
To calculate the appropriate amount of PCR product (insert) to include in the ligation reaction, use the following
equation.
ng of vector kb size of insert
kb size of vector

insert:vector molar ratio = ng of insert

Example of insert:vector ratio calculation:


How much 0.5kb PCR product should be added to a ligation in which 50ng of 3.0kb vector will be used if a 3:1
insert:vector molar ratio is desired?
50ng vector 0.5kb insert
3.0kb vector

3
1

= 25ng insert

Using the same parameters for a 1:1 insert:vector molar ratio, 8.3ng of a 0.5kb insert would be required.
Tip: The Biomath calculator (www.promega.com/biomath) can be used to determine the amount of insert
DNA needed. The pGEM-T Vector size is 3000bp and the pGEM-T Easy Vector size is 3015bp.

Promega Corporaon 2800 Woods Hollow Road Madison, WI 53711-5399 USA Toll Free in USA 800-356-9526 608-274-4330 Fax 608-277-2516
www.promega.com
TM042 Revised 12/10

4.

Transformations Using the pGEM-T and pGEM-T Easy Vector Ligation Reactions

Use high-eciency competent cells (1 108cfu/g DNA) for transformations. Ligation of fragments with a singlebase overhang can be inecient, so it is essential to use cells with a transformation eciency of 1 108cfu/g DNA (or
higher) in order to obtain a reasonable number of colonies. We recommend using JM109 High Eciency Competent
Cells (Cat.# L2001); these cells are provided with the pGEM-T and pGEM-T Easy Vector Systems II. Other host
strains may be used, but they should be compatible with blue/white color screening and standard ampicillin selection.
Note: Use of super high-eciency competent cells (e.g., XL10 Gold Ultracompetent Cells) may result in a higher
background of blue colonies.
If you are using competent cells other than JM109 High Eciency Competent Cells purchased from Promega, it is
important that the appropriate transformation protocol be followed. Selection for transformants should be on
LB/ampicillin/IPTG/X-Gal plates (See recipe in Section10.C). For best results, do not use plates that are more than
1 month old.
The genotype of JM109 is recA1, endA1, gyrA96, thi, hsdR17 (rK,mK+), relA1, supE44, (lac-proAB), [F, traD36,
proAB, lacIqZM15] (4).
4.A. Transformation Protocol
Materials to Be Supplied by the User
(Solution Compositions are provided in Section 10.C.)

LB plates with ampicillin/IPTG/X-Gal

SOC medium
1.

Prepare two LB/ampicillin/IPTG/X-Gal plates for each ligation reaction, plus two plates for determining
transformation eciency. Equilibrate the plates to room temperature.

2.

Centrifuge the tubes containing the ligation reactions to collect the contents at the bottom. Add 2l of each
ligation reaction to a sterile (17 100mm) polypropylene tube or a 1.5ml microcentrifuge tube on ice (see
Note 1). Set up another tube on ice with 0.1ng uncut plasmid for determination of the transformation eciency
of the competent cells.

3.

Remove tube(s) of frozen JM109 High Eciency Competent Cells from storage and place in an ice bath until just
thawed (about 5 minutes). Mix the cells by gently icking the tube. Avoid excessive pipetting, as the competent
cells are extremely fragile.

4.

Carefully transfer 50l of cells into each tube prepared in Step 2 (use 100l of cells for determination of
transformation eciency).

5.

Gently ick the tubes to mix and place them on ice for 20 minutes.

6.

Heat-shock the cells for 4550 seconds in a water bath at exactly 42C (do not shake).

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TM042 Revised 12/10
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7.

Immediately return the tubes to ice for 2 minutes.

8.

Add 950l room-temperature SOC medium to the tubes containing cells transformed with ligation reactions
and 900l to the tube containing cells transformed with uncut plasmid (LB broth may be substituted, but colony
number may be lower).

9.

Incubate for 1.5 hours at 37C with shaking (~150rpm).

10.

Plate 100l of each transformation culture onto duplicate LB/ampicillin/IPTG/ X-Gal plates. For the transformation control, a 1:10 dilution with SOC medium is recommended for plating. If a higher number of colonies
is desired, the cells may be pelleted by centrifugation at 1,000 g for 10 minutes, resuspended in 200l of SOC
medium, and 100l plated on each of two plates.

11.

Incubate the plates overnight (1624 hours) at 37C. If 100l is plated, approximately 100 colonies per plate are
routinely seen using competent cells that are 1 108cfu/g DNA. Use of ultra-high- eciency competent cells
may result in a higher number of background colonies. Longer incubations or storage of plates at 4C (after 37C
overnight incubation) may be used to facilitate blue color development. White colonies generally contain inserts;
however, inserts may also be present in blue colonies.

Notes:
1.

We have found that use of larger (17 100mm) polypropylene tubes (e.g., Falcon Cat.# 2059) increases
transformation eciency. Tubes from some manufacturers bind DNA and should be avoided.

2.

Colonies containing -galactosidase activity may grow poorly relative to cells lacking this activity. After overnight
growth, the blue colonies may be smaller than the white colonies, which are approximately one millimeter in
diameter.

3.

Blue color will become darker after the plate has been stored overnight at 4C.

4.B. Example of Transformation Eciency Calculation


After 100l of competent cells are transformed with 0.1ng of uncut plasmid DNA, the transformation reaction is added
to 900l of SOC medium (0.1ng DNA/ml). From that volume, a 1:10 dilution with SOC medium (0.01ng DNA/ml) is
made and 100l plated on two plates (0.001ng DNA/100l). If 200 colonies are obtained (average of two plates), what
is the transformation eciency?
200cfu
0.001ng

= 2 105cfu/ng = 2 108cfu/g DNA

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www.promega.com
TM042 Revised 12/10

4.C. Screening Transformants for Inserts


Successful cloning of an insert into the pGEM-T or pGEM-T Easy Vector interrupts the coding sequence of
-galactosidase; recombinant clones can be identied by color screening on indicator plates. However, the characteristics of the PCR products cloned into the vectors can signicantly aect the ratio of blue:white colonies obtained.
Usually clones containing PCR products produce white colonies, but blue colonies can result from PCR fragments that
are cloned in-frame with the lacZ gene. Such fragments are usually a multiple of 3 base pairs long (including the 3-A
overhangs) and do not contain in-frame stop codons. There have been reports of DNA fragments up to 2kb that have
been cloned in-frame and have produced blue colonies. Even if your PCR product is not a multiple of 3 bases long, the
amplication process can introduce mutations (deletions or point mutations) that may result in blue colonies.
The Control Insert DNA supplied with the pGEM-T and pGEM-T Easy Systems is a 542bp fragment from
pGEM-luc Vector DNA (Cat.# E1541). This sequence has been mutated to contain multiple stop codons in all six
reading frames, which ensures a low background of blue colonies for the control reaction. Results obtained with the
Control Insert DNA may not be representative of those achieved with your PCR product.
5.

pGEM-T and pGEM-T Easy Vector Sequences, Multi-Cloning Sites and Circle Maps

5.A. Sequence and Multi-Cloning Site of the pGEM-T Vector


The pGEM-T Vector is derived from the pGEM-5Zf(+) Vector (GenBank Accession No. X65308). The pGEM-T
Vector was created by linearizing the pGEM-5Zf(+) Vector with EcoRV at base 51 and adding a T to both 3-ends.
The EcoRV site will not be recovered upon ligation of the vector and insert.
T7 Transcription Start
5 . . . TGTAA TACGA CTCAC TATAG GGCGA ATTGG GCCCG ACGTC GCATG CTCCC GGCCG
3 . . . ACATT ATGCT GAGTG ATATC CCGCT TAACC CGGGC TGCAG CGTAC GAGGG CCGGC
T7 Promoter
ApaI

AatII

SphI

BstZI

CCATG GCCGC GGGATT3


ATCAC TAGTG CGGCC GCCTG CAGGT CGACC ATATG
cloned insert
GGTAC CGGCG CCCTA
3TTAGTG ATCAC GCCGG CGGAC GTCCA GCTGG TATAC

NcoI

SacII

SpeI

NotI
BstZI

PstI

SalI

NdeI

GGAGA GCTCC CAACG CGTTG GATGC ATAGC TTGAG TATTC TATAG TGTCA CCTAA AT . . . 3
CCTCT CGAGG GTTGC GCAAC CTACG TATCG AACTC ATAAG ATATC ACAGT GGATT TA . . . 5
SP6 Promoter
SacI

BstXI

NsiI

0357MA06_2A

SP6 Transcription Start

Figure 1. The promoter and multiple cloning sequence of the pGEM-T Vector. The top strand corresponds
to the RNA synthesized by T7 RNA polymerase. The bottom strand corresponds to the RNA synthesized by SP6 RNA
polymerase.

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TM042 Revised 12/10
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5.B. pGEM-T Vector Map and Sequence Reference Points

XmnI 1994
NaeI
2692

T7

f1 ori

Amp r

pGEM-T
Vector
(3000bp)

SpeI
NotI
BstZI
PstI
SalI
NdeI
SacI
BstXI
NsiI

ori

lacZ

1 start
14
20
26
31
37
46

ApaI
AatII
SphI
BstZI
NcoI
SacII

SP6

55
62
62
73
75
82
94
103
112
126

0356VA04_3A

ScaI
1875

pGEM-T Vector sequence reference points:


T7 RNA polymerase transcription initiation site
multiple cloning region
SP6 RNA polymerase promoter (17 to +3)
SP6 RNA polymerase transcription initiation site
pUC/M13 Reverse Sequencing Primer binding site
lacZ start codon
lac operator

1
10113
124143
126
161177
165
185201

-lactamase coding region

13222182

phage f1 region

23652820

lac operon sequences


pUC/M13 Forward Sequencing Primer binding site
T7 RNA polymerase promoter (17 to +3)

28212981, 151380
29412957
29843

Note: Inserts can be sequenced using the SP6 Promoter Primer (Cat.# Q5011), T7 Promoter Primer (Cat.# Q5021),
pUC/M13 Forward Primer (Cat.# Q5601), or pUC/M13 Reverse Primer (Cat.# Q5421).

Note: A single digest with BstZI (Cat.# R6881) will release inserts cloned into the pGEM-T Vector. Double
digests can also be used to release inserts.

Promega Corporaon 2800 Woods Hollow Road Madison, WI 53711-5399 USA Toll Free in USA 800-356-9526 608-274-4330 Fax 608-277-2516
www.promega.com
TM042 Revised 12/10

5.C. Sequence and Multi-Cloning Site of the pGEM-T Easy Vector


The sequence of the pGEM-T Easy Vector is available at: www.promega.com/vectors/
The pGEM-T Easy Vector has been linearized at base 60 with EcoRV and a T added to both 3-ends. The EcoRV site
will not be recovered upon ligation of the vector and insert.
T7 Transcription Start
5 . . . TGTAA TACGA CTCAC TATAG GGCGA ATTGG GCCCG ACGTC GCATG CTCCC GGCCG CCATG
3 . . . ACATT ATGCT GAGTG ATATC CCGCT TAACC CGGGC TGCAG CGTAC GAGGG CCGGC GGTAC
T7 Promoter
ApaI

AatII

SphI

BstZI

NcoI

GCGGC CGCGG GAATT CGATT3


ATCAC TAGTG AATTC GCGGC CGCCT GCAGG TCGAC
cloned insert
CGCCG GCGCC CTTAA GCTA
3TTAGTG ATCAC TTAAG CGCCG GCGGA CGTCC AGCTG

NotI
BstZI

SacII

EcoRI

SpeI

EcoRI

NotI
BstZI

PstI

SalI

SP6 Transcription Start


CATAT GGGA GAGCT CCCAA CGCGT TGGAT GCATA GCT TG AGTAT TCTAT AGTGT CACCT AAAT . . . 3
GTATA CCCT CTCGA GGGTT GCGCA ACCTA CGTAT CGAAC T CATA AGATA TCACA GTGGA TT TA . . . 5
SP6 Promoter
NdeI

SacI

BstXI

NsiI

Figure 2. The promoter and multiple cloning sequence of the pGEM-T Easy Vector. The top strand shown
corresponds to the RNA synthesized by T7 RNA polymerase. The bottom strand corresponds to the RNA synthesized
by SP6 RNA polymerase.

More PCR Cloning Resources are available in the Cloning Chapter of the Protocols and Applications Guide at:
www.promega.com/paguide

10

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TM042 Revised 12/10
www.promega.com

5.D. pGEM-T Easy Vector Map and Sequence Reference Points


XmnI 2009

ScaI 1890

NaeI 2707
f1 ori

Ampr

pGEM-T Easy
Vector

lacZ
T

T7
ApaI
AatII
SphI
BstZI
NcoI
BstZI
NotI
SacII
EcoRI

1 start
14
20
26
31
37
43
43
49
52

ori

SpeI
EcoRI
NotI
BstZI
PstI
SalI
NdeI
SacI
BstXI
NsiI

64
70
77
77
88
90
97
109
118
127
141

SP6

1473VA05_6A

(3015bp)

pGEM-T Easy Vector sequence reference points:

T7 RNA polymerase transcription initiation site


multiple cloning region
SP6 RNA polymerase promoter (17 to +3)
SP6 RNA polymerase transcription initiation site
pUC/M13 Reverse Sequencing Primer binding site
lacZ start codon
lac operator

1
10128
139158
141
176197
180
200216

-lactamase coding region

13372197

phage f1 region

23802835

lac operon sequences


pUC/M13 Forward Sequencing Primer binding site
T7 RNA polymerase promoter (17 to +3)

28362996, 166395
29492972
29993

Note: Inserts can be sequenced using the SP6 Promoter Primer (Cat.# Q5011), T7 Promoter Primer (Cat.# Q5021),
pUC/M13 Forward Primer (Cat.# Q5601), or pUC/M13 Reverse Primer (Cat.# Q5421).

Note: A single digest with BstZI (Cat.# R6881), EcoRI (Cat.# R6011) or NotI (Cat.# R6431) will release inserts
cloned into the pGEM-T Easy Vector. Double digests can also be used to release inserts.

Promega Corporaon 2800 Woods Hollow Road Madison, WI 53711-5399 USA Toll Free in USA 800-356-9526 608-274-4330 Fax 608-277-2516
www.promega.com
TM042 Revised 12/10

11

General Considerations for PCR Cloning

6.A. PCR Product Purity


An aliquot of the PCR reaction should be analyzed on an agarose gel before use in the ligation reaction. The PCR
product can be gel-puried or puried directly from the PCR amplication using the Wizard SV Gel and PCR
Clean-Up System (Cat.# A9281). Exposure to shortwave ultraviolet light should be minimized to avoid the formation of
pyrimidine dimers. Even if distinct bands of the expected size are observed, primer-dimers should be removed by gel
purication or by using the Wizard SV Gel and PCR Clean-Up System. Use of crude PCR product may produce
successful ligation in some cases; however, the number of white colonies containing the relevant insert may be reduced
due to preferential incorporation of primer-dimers or other extraneous reaction products. Therefore, it may be
necessary to screen numerous colonies in order to identify clones that contain the PCR product of interest.
6.B. Properties of Various Thermostable Polymerases
Not all thermostable polymerases generate fragments with 3A-tailed fragments. Table 1 lists the properties of several
commonly used polymerase enzymes.
Table 1. Comparison of PCR Product Properties for Thermostable DNA Polymerases.
Thermostable DNA Polymerase

GoTaq /
Taq/
AmpliTaq

Tfl

Tth

Vent
(Tli)

Deep
Vent

Pfu

Pwo

Resulting DNA ends

3A

3A

3A

Blunt

Blunt

Blunt

Blunt

53exonuclease activity

Yes

Yes

Yes

No

No

No

No

35exonuclease activity

No

No

No

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Characteristic

12

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TM042 Revised 12/10
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6.C. Cloning Blunt-Ended PCR Products


Thermostable DNA polymerases with proofreading activity, such as Pfu DNA Polymerase (Cat.# M7741),
Pwo DNA polymerase and Tli DNA Polymerase, generate blunt-ended fragments. Nevertheless, PCR products
generated using these polymerases can be modied using the A-tailing procedure outlined in Figure 3 and ligated into
the pGEM-T and pGEM-T Easy Vectors (5). Using this method, only one insert will be ligated into the vector (as
opposed to multiple insertions that can occur with blunt-ended cloning). In addition, with T-vector cloning there is no
need to dephosphorylate the vector, and there is a low background of religated vector.
Using this procedure with optimized insert:vector ratios, 5595% recombinants were obtained when Pfu and Tli DNA
Polymerases were used to generate the insert DNA (Table 2). It is critical that the PCR fragments are puried using the
Wizard SV Gel and PCR Clean-Up System (Cat.# A9281) or by direct isolation from a gel by other means. In the
absence of purication, the proofreading activity of the Pfu, Pwo and Tli DNA Polymerases will degrade the PCR
fragments, or remove the 3-terminal deoxyadenosine added during tailing or the 3-terminal deoxythymidine from
the vector during the A-tailing reaction or ligation.
To optimize cloning eciency, the amount of DNA in the A-tailing reaction and the ligation volumes must be adjusted
depending on the molar yield of the puried PCR product. When molar concentrations are high due to small fragment
size and/or good amplication, small volumes of the PCR fragment are needed for the A-tailing and ligation reactions.
However, when molar concentration is low due to large fragment size and/or poor amplication, large volumes of the
PCR fragment are needed for the A-tailing and ligation reactions. We have successfully used 17l of puried PCR
fragment in A-tailing reactions to optimize the insert:vector ratio. (See Section 3.B for further discussion of optimizing
the insert:vector ratio.) Recombinants were identied by blue/white screening, and 70100% were shown to have the
correct size insert by PCR. Few recombinants were observed in control reactions in which the PCR fragment was not
tailed. These control results conrm that the majority of the pGEM-T Easy Vector used contained 3-terminal
deoxythymidine and that, during the A-tailing, Taq DNA Polymerase added a 3-terminal deoxyadenosine to a
signicant proportion of the PCR fragments.

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13

6.C. Cloning Blunt-Ended PCR Products (continued)


Table 2. Comparison of A-Tailing Procedures.
% Recombinants1
1-Hour Ligation at 24C
(Standard)

16-Hour Ligation at 4C
(Alternative)

542bp

1.8kb

542bp

1.8kb

Pfu DNA Polymerase

6584%2

3155%3

8195%2

5075%3

Tli DNA Polymerase

6877%4

3765%5

8593%4

6081%5

Polymerase

PCR fragments generated by Pfu and Tli DNA Polymerase were A-tailed and ligated into pGEM-T Easy Vector for
1 hour at 24C or for 16 hours at 4C. Two microliters of ligation mix was transformed into JM109 Competent Cells
and plated on LB/amp/IPTG/X-gal plates.
1

% Recombinants = % white and/or pale blue colonies. PCR fragments were puried with the Wizard PCR Preps
DNA Purication System prior to A-tailing.

Insert:vector ratios tested: 5:1, 3:1, 1:1. Volume of PCR amplication product used in A-tailing: 12l.

Insert:vector ratios tested: 3:1, 2:1, 1:1. Volume of PCR amplication product used in A-tailing: 37l.

Insert:vector ratios tested: 3:1, 2:1, 1:1. Volume of PCR amplication product used in A-tailing: 12l.

Insert:vector ratios tested: 2:1, 1:1. Volume of PCR amplication product used in A-tailing: 47l.
Start with 17l of purified PCR fragment generated by a
proofreading polymerase (e.g., Pfu DNA Polymerase).
Add 1l Taq DNA Polymerase 10X Reaction Buffer with MgCl2.
Add dATP to a final concentration of 0.2mM.
Add 5 units of Taq DNA Polymerase.
Add deionized water to a final reaction volume of 10l.

Use 12l in a ligation reaction with


Promegas pGEM-T and pGEM-T Easy Vector.

2357MA02_9A

Incubate at 70C for 1530 minutes.

Figure 3. An A-tailing procedure for blunt-ended PCR fragments puried with the Wizard SV Gel and
PCR Clean-Up System (Cat.# A9281) and used in T-vector cloning.

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7.

Experimental Controls

Positive Control: Set up a ligation reaction with the Control Insert DNA as described in Section 3 and use it for
transformations. This control will allow you to determine whether the ligation is proceeding eciently. Typically,
approximately 100 colonies should be observed, 1040% of which are blue, when competent cells that have a
transformation eciency of 1 108cfu/g DNA are transformed. Greater than 60% of the colonies should be white.
The Control Insert DNA is designed to produce white colonies; however, other insert DNA may not yield white colonies
(see Section 4.C). Background blue colonies from the positive control ligation reaction arise from non-T-tailed or
undigested pGEM-T or pGEM-T Easy Vector. These blue colonies are a useful internal transformation control; if no
colonies are obtained, the transformation has failed. If small numbers of blue colonies are obtained, but no whites, the
ligation reaction may have failed. If <50% white colonies are seen in the positive control reaction, then the ligation
conditions were probably suboptimal or nuclease contamination of the ligation reaction may have occurred.
The concentration of the Control Insert DNA is such that 2l (4ng/l) can be used in a 10l ligation reaction to achieve
a 1:1 molar ratio with 50ng of the pGEM-T or pGEM-T Easy Vectors.
Background Control: Set up a ligation reaction with 50ng of pGEM-T or pGEM-T Easy Vector and no insert as
described in Section 3, and use it for transformations. This control allows determination of the number of background
blue colonies resulting from non-T-tailed or undigested pGEM-T or pGEM-T Easy Vector alone. If the recommendations in Section 4 are followed, 1030 blue colonies will typically be observed if the transformation eciency of
the competent cells is 1 108cfu/g DNA. (Under these conditions, cells that have an eciency of 1 107cfu/g DNA
would yield 13 blue colonies, and cells with a transformation eciency of 1 109cfu/g DNA would yield 100300
blue colonies). Compare the number of blue colonies obtained with this background control to the number of blue
colonies obtained in the standard reaction using the PCR product. If ligation of the PCR product yields dramatically
more blue colonies than the background control reaction, then recombinants are probably among these blue colonies
(see Section 4.C).
Transformation Control: Check the transformation eciency of the competent cells by transforming them with an
uncut plasmid (not pGEM-T or pGEM-T Easy, since these vectors are linearized) and calculating cfu/g DNA. If the
transformation eciency is lower than 1 108cfu/g DNA, prepare fresh cells. If you are not using JM109 High
Eciency Competent Cells (provided with pGEM-T and pGEM-T Easy Vector Systems II; Cat.# A3610 and A1380,
respectively), be sure the cells are compatible with blue/white screening and standard ampicillin selection and have a
transformation eciency of at least 1 108cfu/g DNA.

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TM042 Revised 12/10

15

8.

Troubleshooting

For questions not addressed here, please contact your local Promega Branch Oce or Distributor. Contact information
available at: www.promega.com. E-mail: techserv@promega.com
Symptoms
No colonies

Causes and Comments


A problem has occurred with the transformation reaction or the
cells have lost competence. Background undigested vector and
religated non-T-tailed vector should yield 1030 blue colonies
independent of the presence of insert DNA. Check the background control (Section 7).
Use high-eciency competent cells (1 108cfu/g DNA). Test
the eciency by transforming the cells with an uncut plasmid
that allows for antibiotic selection, such as the pGEM-5Zf(+)
Vector. If the guidelines in Section 4 are followed, cells at
1 108cfu/g DNA typically yield 100 colonies. Therefore, you
would not see any colonies from cells that are <1 107cfu/g
DNA (Section 7).

Less than 10% white colonies


with Control Insert DNA

Improper dilution of the 2X Rapid Ligation. The T4 DNA ligase


buffer is provided at a concentration of 2X. Use 5l in a 10l
reaction.
If the total number of colonies is high, but there are few/no
white colonies, competent cells may be high eciency
(1 109cfu/g), but there may be a ligation problem.
Approximately 1,000 colonies can be obtained from the
positive control ligation using cells that are 109cfu/g DNA,
with 7090% white colonies. If ligation is suboptimal or fails,
the total number of colonies will be high (up to 300 cells at
1 109cfu/g), but the amount of white colonies will be low or
zero.

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Symptoms
Less than 10% white colonies with
Control Insert DNA (continued)

Causes and Comments


Ligation reaction has failed. Ligase buer may DNA have low
activity. The 2X Rapid Ligation Buer contains ATP, which
degrades during temperature uctuations. Avoid multiple
freeze-thaw cycles by making single-use aliquots of the buer.
Use a fresh vial of buer. To test the activity of the ligase and
buer, set up a ligation with ~20ng of DNA markers (e.g.,
Lambda DNA/HindIII Markers, Cat.# G1711). Compare ligated
and nonligated DNA on a gel and check that the fragments have
been religated into high-molecular-weight material.
T-overhangs have been removed, allowing blunt-ended ligation
of vector and giving rise to more blue than white colonies. Avoid
introduction of nucleases, which may degrade the T-overhangs.
Use only the T4 DNA Ligase provided with the system, which
has been tested for minimal exonuclease activity. Also, use
sterile, nuclease-free water.

Less than 60% white colonies with


Control Insert DNA

Improper dilution of the Rapid Ligation Buer. The Rapid


Ligation Buer is provided at a 2X concentration. Use 5l in a
10l reaction.
T-overhangs have been removed, allowing blunt-ended ligation
of vector and giving rise to more blue than white colonies. Avoid
introduction of nucleases, which may degrade the T-overhangs.
Use only the T4 DNA Ligase provided with the system, which
has been tested for minimal exonuclease activity.
Ligation temperature is too high. Higher temperatures (>28C)
give rise to increased background and fewer recombinants.

Low number or no white colonies


containing PCR product

Improper dilution of the Rapid Ligation Buer. The Rapid


Ligation Buer is provided at a 2X concentration. Use 5l in a
10l reaction.
Ligation incubation is not long enough. Optimal results are seen
with an overnight ligation.
Failed ligation due to an inhibitory component in the PCR
product. Mix some of the PCR product with the positive control
ligation to determine whether an inhibitor is present. If an
inhibitor is indicated, repurify the PCR fragment.

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TM042 Revised 12/10

17

8.

Troubleshooting (continued)

Symptoms
Low number or no white colonies
containing PCR product (continued)

Causes and Comments


PCR product is not ligating because there are no 3-A overhangs.
As summarized in Table 1, not all thermostable DNA polymerases create a 3-A overhang (6,7). Blunt-ended fragments may
be subsequently A-tailed by treatment with an appropriate
polymerase and dATP (810).
PCR product cannot be ligated due to pyrimidine dimers formed
from UV over-exposure. This is a common problem with
gel-puried DNA. There is no way to x this; the DNA must be
remade. Exposure to shortwave UV should be limited as much as
possible. Use a glass plate between the gel and UV source to
decrease UV overexposure. If possible, only visualize the PCR
product using a longwave UV source
The PCR fragment is inserted, but it is not disrupting the lacZ
gene. If there are a higher number of blue colonies resulting
from the PCR fragment ligation than with the background
control, some of these blue colonies may contain insert. Screen
blue and pale blue colonies (see Section 4.C)
Insert:vector ratio is not optimal. Check the integrity and
quantity of your PCR fragment by gel analysis. Optimize the
insert:vector ratio (see Section 3.B).
There may be primer-dimers present in PCR fragment preparation. Primer-dimers will ligate into the pGEM-T or pGEM-T
Easy Vector but may not be seen after restriction digestion and
gel analysis because of their small size. The vector will appear to
contain no insert. More blue colonies may be seen with the
ligation than on the background control plates. The PCR
fragment should be gel-puried.
Multiple PCR products may have been generated and cloned
into the pGEM-T or pGEM-T Easy Vector. Gel-purify the
PCR fragment of interest.

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Symptoms
Low number or no white colonies
containing PCR product (continued)

Causes and Comments


DNA has rearranged. Check a number of clones to see whether
the rearrangement is random. If so, the clone of interest should
be present and can be identied by screening several clones. If
the same rearrangement is found in all of the clones, use of a
repair-decient bacterial strain (e.g., SURE cells) may reduce
recombination events.

PCR product ligation reaction produces


white colonies only (no blue colonies)

Ampicillin is inactive, allowing ampicillin- sensitive cells to grow.


Check that ampicillin plates are made properly and used within
one month. Test ampicillin activity by streaking plates, with and
without ampicillin, using an ampicillin-sensitive clone.
The bacterial strain (e.g., JM109) has lost its F episome, or
the bacterial strain used is not compatible with blue/white
screening. Check the background control. If these colonies are
not blue, the cells may have lost the F episome (assuming
lacIqZM15 is located on the F in the transformed strain and
appropriate plates were used). Be sure that the cells are
prepared properly for use with this system (see Section 4).
Plates are incompatible with blue/white screening. Check the
background control. If these colonies are not blue, check that
the plates have ampicillin/IPTG/X-Gal and are fresh. If there is
any question about the quality of the plates, repeat plating with
fresh plates

Not enough clones contain the


PCR product of interest

Insucient A-tailing of the PCR fragment. After the PCR


product of interest urication of the PCR fragment, set up an
A-tailing reaction (810). Clean up the sample and proceed with
the protocol.
Insert:vector ratio is not optimal. Check the integrity and quality
of your PCR fragment by gel analysis. Optimize the insert:vector
ratio (see Section 3.B).
Multiple PCR products are generated and cloned into the
pGEM-T or pGEM-T Easy Vector. Gel-purify the PCR
fragment of interest.

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www.promega.com
TM042 Revised 12/10

19

9.

References

1.

Mezei, L.M. and Storts, D.R. (1994) Purication of PCR products. In: PCR Technology: Current Innovations,
Grin, H.G. and Grin, A.M., eds., CRC Press, Boca Raton, FL, 21.

2.

Robles, J. and Doers, M. (1994) pGEM-T Vector Systems troubleshooting guide. Promega Notes 45, 1920.

3.

Ha, L. and Mezei, L. (1989) Amplifications 1, 8.

4.

Messing, J. et al. (1981) A system for shotgun DNA sequencing. Nucl. Acids Res. 9, 30921.

5.

Knoche, K. and Kephart, D. (1999) Cloning blunt-end Pfu DNA Polymerase-generated PCR fragments into
pGEM-T Vector Systems. Promega Notes 71, 1013.

6.

Clark, J.M. (1988) Novel non-templated nucleotide addition reactions catalyzed by procaryotic and eucaryotic
DNA polymerases. Nucl. Acids Res. 16, 967786.

7.

Newton, C.R. and Graham, A. (1994) In: PCR, BIOS Scientic Publishers, Ltd., Oxford, UK, 13.

8.

Kobs, G. (1995) pGEM-T Vector: Cloning of modied blunt-ended DNA fragments. Promega Notes 55,
2829.

9.

Kobs, G. (1997) Cloning blunt-end DNA fragments into the pGEM-T Vector Systems. Promega Notes 62,
1518.

10.

Zhou, M.-Y., Clark, S.E. and Gomez-Sanchez, C.E. (1995) Universal cloning method by TA strategy. BioTechniques 19, 3435.

10.

Appendix

10.A. pGEM-T Vector Restriction Enzyme Sites


The pGEM-T Vector is derived from the circular pGEM-5Zf(+) Vector (GenBank Accession No. X65308). The
pGEM-5Zf(+) Vector sequence is available at: www.promega.com/vectors/
The following restriction enzyme tables are based on those of the circular pGEM-5Zf(+) Vector. The pGEM-T Vector
has been created by linearizing the pGEM-5Zf(+) Vector with EcoRV at base 51 and adding a T to both 3-ends. This
site will not be recovered upon ligation of the vector and insert. The following tables were constructed using
DNASTAR sequence analysis software. Please note that we have not veried this information by restriction digestion
with each enzyme listed. The location given species the 3-end of the cut DNA (the base to the left of the cut site).
Please contact your local Promega Branch Oce or Distributor if you identify a discrepancy. In the U.S., contact
Technical Services at 1-800-356-9526.

20

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TM042 Revised 12/10
www.promega.com

Table 3. Restriction Enzymes That Cut the pGEM-T Vector 15 Times.


Enzyme # of Sites
AatII
1
AccI
1
AcyI
2
AIII
2
Alw26I
2
Alw44I
2
AlwNI
1
ApaI
1
AspHI
4
AvaII
2
BanI
3
BanII
3
BbuI
1
BglI
3
BsaI
1
BsaAI
1
BsaHI
2
BsaJI
5
Bsp120I
1
BspHI
2
BspMI
1
BssSI
2
BstOI
5
BstXI
1
BstZI
2
Cfr10I
2
DdeI
4
DraI
3
DraIII
1
DrdI
2
DsaI
2
EagI
2
EarI
3
EclHKI
1
Eco52I
2
EcoICRI
1
EcoRV
1

Location
20
76
17, 1932
99, 502
1456, 2232
816, 2062
918
14
94, 820, 1981, 2066
1533, 1755
246, 1343, 2626
14, 94, 2664
26
39, 1515, 2833
1456
2589
17, 1932
37, 43, 241, 662, 2936
10
1222, 2230
62
675, 2059
242, 530, 651, 664, 2937
103
31, 62
1475, 2690
777, 1186, 1352, 1892
1261, 1280, 1972
2589
610, 2544
37, 43
31, 62
386, 2190, 2878
1395
31, 62
92
51*

Enzyme # of Sites
FokI
5
FspI
2
HaeII
4
HgaI
4
HincII
1
HindII
1
Hsp92I
2
MaeI
5
MluI
1
NaeI
1
NciI
4
NcoI
1
NdeI
1
NgoMIV
1
NotI
1
NsiI
1
NspI
2
Ppu10I
1
PstI
1
PvuI
2
PvuII
2
RsaI
1
SacI
1
SacII
1
SalI
1
ScaI
1
SI
1
SinI
2
SpeI
1
SphI
1
Sse8387I
1
SspI
2
StyI
1
TaqI
4
TI
2
VspI
3
XmnI
1

Location
119, 1361, 1542, 1829, 2919
1617, 2840
380, 750, 2740, 2748
613, 1191, 1921, 2806
77
77
17, 1932
56, 997, 1250, 1585, 2740
99
2692
30, 882, 1578, 1929
37
82
2690
62
112
26, 506
108
73
1765, 2861
326, 2890
1875
94
46
75
1875
39
1533, 1755
55
26
73
2199, 2381
37
76, 602, 2046, 2622
337, 477
273, 332, 1567
1994

*The pGEM-T Vector has been created by linearizing the pGEM-5Zf(+) Vector with EcoRV at base 51 and adding a
T to both 3-ends. This site will not be recovered upon ligation of the vector and insert.
Note: The enzymes listed in boldface type are available from Promega.

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www.promega.com
TM042 Revised 12/10

21

10.A. pGEM-T Vector Restriction Enzyme Sites (continued)


Table 4. Restriction Enzymes That Do Not Cut the pGEM-T Vector.
AccB7I
AccIII
Acc65I
AII
AgeI
AscI
AvaI
AvrII
BalI
BamHI
BbeI
BbrPI

BbsI
BclI
BglII
BlpI
Bpu1102I
BsaBI
BsaMI
BsmI
BsrGI
BssHII
Bst1107I
Bst98I

BstEII
Bsu36I
ClaI
CspI
Csp45I
DraII
Eco47III
Eco72I
Eco81I
EcoNI
EcoRI
EheI

FseI
HindIII
HpaI
I-PpoI
KasI
KpnI
NarI
NheI
NruI
PacI
PaeR7I
PMI

PinAI
PmeI
PmlI
PpuMI
PshAI
Psp5II
PspAI
RsrII
SgfI
SgrAI
SmaI
SnaBI

SplI
SrfI
StuI
SwaI
Tth111I
XbaI
XcmI
XhoI
XmaI

Note: The enzymes listed in boldface type are available from Promega.
10.B. pGEM-T Easy Vector Restriction Enzyme Sites
The sequence of the pGEM-T Easy Vector is available on the Internet at: www.promega.com/vectors/
The pGEM-T Easy Vector has been linearized at base 60 with EcoRV and a T added to both 3-ends. This site will not
be recovered upon ligation of the vector and insert. The following tables were constructed using DNASTAR sequence
analysis software. Please note that we have not veried this information by restriction digestion with each enzyme
listed. The location given species the 3-end of the cut DNA (the base to the left of the cut site). Please contact your
local Promega Branch Oce or Distributor if you identify a discrepancy. In the U.S., contact Technical Services at
1-800-356-9526.

22

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TM042 Revised 12/10
www.promega.com

Table 5. Restriction Enzymes that Cut the pGEM-T Easy Vector 15 Times.
Enzyme # of Sites
AatII
1
AccI
1
AcyI
2
AIII
2
Alw26I
2
Alw44I
2
AlwNI
1
ApaI
1
AspHI
4
AvaII
2
BanI
3
BanII
3
BbuI
1
BglI
4
BsaI
1
BsaAI
1
BsaHI
2
BsaJI
5
Bsp120I
1
BspHI
2
BspMI
1
BssSI
2
BstOI
5
BstXI
1
BstZI
3
Cfr10I
2
DdeI
4
DraI
3
DraIII
1
DrdI
2
DsaI
2
EagI
3
EarI
3
EclHKI
1
Eco52I
3
EcoICRI
1
EcoRI
2

Location
20
91
17, 1947
114, 517
1471, 2247
831, 2077
933
14
109, 835, 1996, 2081
1548, 1770
261, 1358, 2641
14, 109, 2679
26
39, 42, 1530, 2848
1471
2604
17, 1947
37, 46, 256, 677, 2951
10
1237, 2245
77
690, 2074
257, 545, 666, 679, 2952
118
31, 43, 77
1490, 2705
792, 1201, 1367, 1907
1276, 1295, 1987
2604
625, 2559
37, 46
31, 43, 77
401, 2205, 2893
1410
31, 43, 77
107
52, 70

Enzyme # of Sites
EcoRV
1
FokI
5
FspI
2
HaeII
4
HgaI
4
HincII
1
HindII
1
Hsp92I
2
MaeI
5
MluI
1
NaeI
1
NciI
4
NcoI
1
NdeI
1
NgoMIV
1
NotI
2
NsiI
1
NspI
2
Ppu10I
1
PstI
1
PvuI
2
PvuII
2
RsaI
1
SacI
1
SacII
1
SalI
1
ScaI
1
SinI
2
SpeI
1
SphI
1
Sse8387I
1
SspI
2
StyI
1
TaqI
5
TI
2
VspI
3
XmnI
1

Location
60*
134, 1376, 1557, 1844, 2931
1632, 2855
395, 765, 2755, 2763
628, 1206, 1936, 2821
92
92
17, 1947
65, 1012, 1265, 1600, 2755
114
2707
30, 897, 1593, 1944
37
97
2705
43, 77
127
26, 521
123
88
1780, 2876
341, 2905
1890
109
49
90
1890
1548, 1770
64
26
88
2214, 2396
37
56, 91, 617, 2061, 2637
352, 492
288, 347, 1582
2009

*The pGEM-T Easy Vector has been linearized at base 60 with EcoRV and a T added to both 3-ends. This site will
not be recovered upon ligation of the vector and insert.
Note: The enzymes listed in boldface type are available from Promega.

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www.promega.com
TM042 Revised 12/10

23

10.B. pGEM-T Easy Vector Restriction Enzyme Sites (continued)


Table 6. Restriction Enzymes That Do Not Cut the pGEM-T Easy Vector.
AccB7I
AccIII
Acc65I
AII
AgeI
AscI
AvaI
AvrII
BalI
BamHI
BbeI
BbrPI

BbsI
BclI
BglII
BlpI
Bpu1102I
BsaBI
BsaMI
BsmI
BsrGI
BssHII
Bst1107I
Bst98I

BstEII
Bsu36I
ClaI
CspI
Csp45I
DraII
Eco47III
Eco72I
Eco81I
EcoNI
EheI
FseI

HindIII
HpaI
I-PpoI
KasI
KpnI
NarI
NheI
NruI
PacI
PaeR7I
PMI
PinAI

PmeI
PmlI
PpuMI
PshAI
Psp5II
PspAI
RsrII
SI
SgfI
SgrAI
SmaI
SnaBI

SplI
SrfI
StuI
SwaI
Tth111I
XbaI
XcmI
XhoI
XmaI

Note: The enzymes listed in boldface type are available from Promega.
10.C. Composition of Buers and Solutions
IPTG stock solution (0.1M)
1.2g IPTG
Add water to 50ml nal volume. Filter-sterilize and
store at 4C.
X-Gal (2ml)
100mg 5-bromo-4-chloro-3indolyl--D-galactoside
Dissolve in 2ml N,N-dimethyl-formamide. Cover
with aluminum foil and store at 20C.
LB medium (per liter)
10g Bacto-tryptone
5g
5g

Bacto-yeast extract
NaCl

LB plates with ampicillin


Add 15g agar to 1 liter of LB medium. Autoclave. Allow
the medium to cool to 50C before adding ampicillin to a
nal concentration of 100g/ml. Pour 3035ml of
medium into 85mm petri dishes. Let the agar harden.
Store at 4C for up to 1 month or at room temperature for
up to 1 week.
LB plates with ampicillin/IPTG/X-Gal
Make the LB plates with ampicillin as above; then
supplement with 0.5mM IPTG and 80g/ml X-Gal and
pour the plates. Alternatively, 100l of 100mM IPTG and
20l of 50mg/ml X-Gal may be spread over the surface
of an LB-ampicillin plate and allowed to absorb for
30 minutes at 37C prior to use.

Adjust pH to 7.0 with NaOH.

24

Promega Corporaon 2800 Woods Hollow Road Madison, WI 53711-5399 USA Toll Free in USA 800-356-9526 608-274-4330 Fax 608-277-2516
TM042 Revised 12/10
www.promega.com

SOC medium (100ml)


2.0g Bacto-tryptone
0.5g Bacto-yeast extract
1ml 1M NaCl
0.25ml 1M KCl
1ml 2M Mg2+ stock, lter-sterilized
1ml

2M glucose, lter-sterilized

Add Bacto -tryptone, Bacto-yeast extract, NaCl


and KCl to 97ml distilled water. Stir to dissolve.
Autoclave and cool to room temperature. Add 2M
Mg2+ stock and 2M glucose, each to a nal concentration of 20mM. Bring to 100ml with sterile,
distilled water. The nal pH should be 7.0.
2M Mg2+ stock

2X Rapid Ligation Buer, T4 DNA Ligase (provided)


60mM Tris-HCl (pH 7.8)
20mM MgCl2
20mM
2mM
10%

DTT
ATP
polyethylene glycol (MW8000, ACS Grade)

Store in single-use aliquots at 20C. Avoid multiple


freeze-thaw cycles.
TYP broth (per liter)
16g Bacto-tryptone
16g
5g
2.5g

Bacto-yeast extract
NaCl
K2HPO4

20.33g MgCl2 6H2O


24.65g MgSO4 7H2O
Add distilled water to 100ml. Filter sterilize.
10.D. Related Products
PCR Cloning Systems
Product
pTARGET Mammalian Expression Vector System

Size

Cat.#

20 reactions

A1410

Direct mammalian expression from a T-Vector.

Amplication Products
A partial list of our amplication products is given on the next page. Please visit our Web site at:
www.promega.com/applications/pcr/ to see a complete list.

Promega Corporaon 2800 Woods Hollow Road Madison, WI 53711-5399 USA Toll Free in USA 800-356-9526 608-274-4330 Fax 608-277-2516
www.promega.com
TM042 Revised 12/10

25

10.D. Related Products (continued)


Thermostable DNA Polymerases
Product

Size

Cat.#

GoTaq Hot Start Polymerase*

100u

M5001

GoTaq DNA Polymerase

100u M31711, M30012

GoTaq Flexi DNA Polymerase


(allows optimization of Mg2+ concentration in reaction)

100u M82911, M83012

Additional sizes available.


1
Cat.# M3171 & M8301 are available in Europe or through Distributors supported by Promega European Branch Oces.
2
Cat.# M3001 & M8291 are available in all other countries, including the United States.
*For Research Use Only. Not for use in diagnostic procedures.

PCR Master Mixes


Product
GoTaq Hot Start Green Master Mix*
GoTaq Hot Start Colorless Master Mix*
GoTaq Green Master Mix

Size

Cat.#

100 reactions

M5122

1,000 reactions

M5123

100 reactions

M5132

1,000 reactions

M5133

100 reactions M71121, M71222


1,000 reactions M71131, M71232

GoTaq Colorless Master Mix

100 reactions M71421, M71322


1,000 reactions M71431, M71332

GoTaq Master Mixes are premixed solutions containing GoTaq DNA Polymerase, GoTaq Reaction Buer (Green or
Colorless), dNTPs and Mg2+.
1
Cat.# M7112, M7113, M7142 & M7143 are available in Europe or through Distributors supported by Promega European
Branch Oces.
2
Cat.# M7122, M7123, M7132 & M7133 are available in all other countries, including the United States.
*For Research Use Only. Not for use in diagnostic procedures.

PCR Purication Systems


Product

Wizard SV Gel and PCR Clean-Up System


Wizard SV 96 PCR Clean-Up System

26

Size

Cat.#

50 preps

A9281

250 preps

A9282

1 96 preps

A9340

Promega Corporaon 2800 Woods Hollow Road Madison, WI 53711-5399 USA Toll Free in USA 800-356-9526 608-274-4330 Fax 608-277-2516
TM042 Revised 12/10
www.promega.com

Competent Cells
Product

Size

Cat.#

JM109 Competent Cells, >108cfu/g

5 200l

L2001

Single Step (KRX) Competent Cells

5 200l

L3001

Size

Cat.#

Access RT-PCR System

100 reactions

A1250

AccessQuick RT-PCR System

100 reactions

A1702

500 reactions

A1703

100 reactions

A3800

RT-PCR Systems
Product

ImProm-II Reverse Transcription System


Available in additional sizes.

dNTPs
Product
PCR Nucleotide Mix (10mM each)

Size

Cat.#

200l

C1141

1,000l

C1145

10mol of each

U1330

dATP, dCTP, dGTP, dTTP, each at 100mM

40mol of each

U1240

dATP, dCTP, dGTP, dTTP, each at 100mM

200mol of each

U1410

Size

Cat.#

100mg (50mg/ml)

V3941

1g

V3955

5g

V3951

dATP, dCTP, dGTP, dTTP, each at 100mM

Accessory Products
Product
X-Gal
IPTG, Dioxane-Free

Promega Corporaon 2800 Woods Hollow Road Madison, WI 53711-5399 USA Toll Free in USA 800-356-9526 608-274-4330 Fax 608-277-2516
www.promega.com
TM042 Revised 12/10

27

(a)

Licensed under one or more of U.S. Pat. Nos. 5,487,993 and 5,827,657 and European Pat. Nos. 0 550 693 and 0 738 779.

(b)

Licensed under U.S. Pat. No. 5,075,430.

2010 Promega Corporaon. All Rights Reserved.


GoTaq, pGEM and Wizard are registered trademarks of Promega Corporaon. AccessQuick, ImProm-II, pTT and PureYield are trademarks of
Promega Corporaon.
AmpliTaq is a registered trademark of Roche Molecular Systems, Inc. Bacto is a registered trademark of Difco Laboratories. DNASTAR is a registered
trademark of DNASTAR, Inc. Falcon is a trademark of Becton, Dickinson and Company. GenBank is a registered trademark of the U.S. Dept. of Health
and Human Services. SURE is a registered trademark of Stratagene. Vent and Deep Vent are registered trademarks of New England Biolabs, Inc. XL10
Gold is a registered trademark of Stratagene.
Products may be covered by pending or issued patents or may have certain limitaons. Please visit our Web site for more informaon.
All prices and specifications are subject to change without prior notice.
Product claims are subject to change. Please contact Promega Technical Services or access the Promega online catalog for the most up-to-date
information on Promega products.

28

Promega Corporaon 2800 Woods Hollow Road Madison, WI 53711-5399 USA Toll Free in USA 800-356-9526 608-274-4330 Fax 608-277-2516
TM042 Revised 12/10
www.promega.com

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