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Construction of Various Copy Number Plasmid Vectors and Their Utility for Genome Sequencing  

Yang, Tae-Jin (Brassica Genomics Team, National Institute of Agricultural Biotechnology (NIAB), RDA, Arizona Genomics Institute, 303 Forbes building, University of Arizona)
Yu, Yeisoo (Arizona Genomics Institute, 303 Forbes building, University of Arizona)
Frisch, David A. (Genome Center of Wisconsin, 425 Henry Mall, Madison)
Lee, Seunghee (Arizona Genomics Institute, 303 Forbes building, University of Arizona)
Kim, Hye-Ran (Arizona Genomics Institute, 303 Forbes building, University of Arizona)
Kwon, Soo-Jin (Brassica Genomics Team, National Institute of Agricultural Biotechnology (NIAB), RDA)
Park, Beom-Suk (Brassica Genomics Team, National Institute of Agricultural Biotechnology (NIAB), RDA)
Wing, Rod A. (Arizona Genomics Institute, 303 Forbes building, University of Arizona)
Abstract
We developed various plasmid cloning vectors that are useful in the construction of genomic and shotgun libraries. Two medium copy vectors, pCUGlblu21 (pCb21) and pAGlblu21 (pAb21), which are resistant to kanamycin ($Km^R$) and chloramphenicol ($Cam^R$), respectively, are useful for cloning DNA inserts ranging from 5kb to 15kb. Two high copy vectors, pCUGlblu31 (pCb31) and pAGlblu31 (pAb31), containing $Km^R$ and $Cam^R$, respectively, are useful for DNA inserts less than 5kb. These vectors are well adapted for large-scale genome sequencing projects by providing choice of copy number and selectable marker. The small vector size is another advantage of these vectors. All vectors contain lacZa including multicloning sites that originated from pBluscriptllsk- for easy cloning and sequencing. Two medium copy vectors contain unique and rare cutting Swal (ATTTAAAT) restriction enzyme sites for easy determination of insert size. We developed two combined vectors, pC21A31 and pC31A21, which are combinations of (pCb21 + pAb31) and (pCb31 + pAb21), respectively. These two vectors provide four choices of vectors such as $Km^R$ and medium, $Cam^R$ and high, $Cam^R$ and medium, and $Km^R$ and high copy vectors by restriction enzyme cutting, dephosphorylation, and gel purification. These vectors were successfully applied to high throughput shotgun sequencing of rice, tomato, and brassica BAC clones. With an example of extremely biased hydro sheared 3 kb shotgun library of a tomato BAC clone, which is originated from cytogenetically defined peri-centromeric region, we suggest the utility of an additional 10 kb library for sequence assembly of the difficult-to-assemble BAC clone.
Keywords
Plasmid; Cloning Vector; Shotgun library; Genomic library; BAC;
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