pcDNA™3.1 Directional TOPO™ Expression Kit
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Invitrogen™

pcDNA™3.1 Directional TOPO™ Expression Kit

El kit de expresión pcDNA™3.1 direccional TOPO™ utiliza el vector pcDNA3.1D/V5-His-TOPO™ linealizado y activado por la topoisomerasa I para lograrMás información
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Número de catálogoCantidad
K49000120 reacciones
K49004040 reacciones
Número de catálogo K490001
Precio (CLP)
-
Cantidad:
20 reacciones
El kit de expresión pcDNA™3.1 direccional TOPO™ utiliza el vector pcDNA3.1D/V5-His-TOPO™ linealizado y activado por la topoisomerasa I para lograr una clonación direccional en cinco minutos y la posterior expresión de alto nivel.

La tecnología de clonación direccional facilita los experimentos de expresión gracias a las siguientes características:

• Una enzima de corrección utilizada para menos errores en los genes clonados
• Más del 90 % de los clones están en la orientación correcta para la expresión génica, lo que reduce el tiempo dedicado a la detección de colonias.

Además, pcDNA3.1D/V5-His-TOPO™ proporciona fuertes niveles de expresión del promotor del CMV y la opción de una etiqueta C-terminal V5-His Fusion para una fácil detección de la proteína recombinante con un anticuerpo anti-V5 y una rápida purificación en resina quelante de níquel.

Para uso exclusivo en investigación. No apto para uso en procedimientos diagnósticos.

Especificaciones
Sistema constitutivo o inducibleConstitutivo
Tipo de entregaTransfección
Para utilizar con (aplicación)Expresión constitutiva
Tipo de productoKit de expresión TOPO
Cantidad20 reacciones
Agente de selección (eucariótico)Geneticin™ (G-418)
VectorVectores TOPO direccionales, pcDNA
Método de clonaciónTOPO direccional
Línea de productosTOPO, pcDNA
PromotorCMV
Etiqueta de proteínaEtiqueta His (6x), Etiqueta de epítopo V5
Unit SizeEach
Contenido y almacenamiento
Caja 1 (conservar a -20°C):
• 20 μl de pcDNA™3.1D/V5-His-TOPO™ (15–20 ng/μl)
• 10 μl de dNTP Mix
• 50 μl de solución salina
• 1 ml de Agua estéril
• 20 μl de cebador de secuenciación T7 (0.1 μg/μl)
• 20 μl de Cebador de secuenciación inversa BGH (0.1 μg/μl)
• 10 μl de muestra de control para PCR (0.1 μg/μl)
• 10 μl de cebador de control para PCR (0.1 μg/μl cada uno)
• 10 μl de plásmido de control de expresión (0.5 μg/μl)

Caja 2 (conservar a -80°C):
• 6 ml de S.O.C. El medio (puede almacenarse a 4°C o temperatura ambiente)
• 21 x 50μl de células TOP10
•50μl ADN de Control pUC19

Preguntas frecuentes

I performed stable selection but my antibiotic-resistant clones do not express my gene of interest. What could have gone wrong?

Here are possible causes and solutions:

Detection method may not be appropriate or sensitive enough:
- We recommend optimizing the detection protocol or finding more sensitive methods. If the protein is being detected by Coomassie/silver staining, we recommend doing a western blot for increased sensitivity. The presence of endogenous proteins in the lysate may obscure the protein of interest in a Coomassie/silver stain. If available, we recommend using a positive control for the western blot.
- Insufficient number of clones screened: Screen at least 20 clones.
- Inappropriate antibiotic concentration used for stable selection: Make sure the antibiotic kill curve was performed correctly. Since the potency of a given antibiotic depends upon cell type, serum, medium, and culture technique, the dose must be determined each time a stable selection is performed. Even the stable cell lines we offer may be more or less sensitive to the dose we recommend if the medium or serum is significantly different.
- Expression of gene product (even low level) may not be compatible with growth of the cell line: Use an inducible expression system.
- Negative clones may result from preferential linearization at a vector site critical for expression of the gene of interest: Linearize the vector at a site that is not critical for expression, such as within the bacterial resistance marker.

I used a mammalian expression vector but do not get any expression of my protein. Can you help me troubleshoot?

Here are possible causes and solutions:

- Try the control expression that is included in the kit
Possible detection problem:

- Detection of expressed protein may not be possible in a transient transfection, since the transfection efficiency may be too low for detection by methods that assess the entire transfected population. We recommend optimizing the transfection efficiency, doing stable selection, or using methods that permit examination of individual cells. You can also increase the level of expression by changing the promoter or cell type.
- Expression within the cell may be too low for the chosen detection method. We recommend optimizing the detection protocol or finding more sensitive methods. If the protein is being detected by Coomassie/silver staining, we recommend doing a western blot for increased sensitivity. The presence of endogenous proteins in the lysate may obscure the protein of interest in a Coomassie/silver stain. If available, we recommend using a positive control for the western blot. Protein might be degraded or truncated: Check on a Northern. Possible time-course issue: Since the expression of a protein over time will depend upon the nature of the protein, we always recommend doing a time course for expression. A pilot time-course assay will help to determine the optimal window for expression. Possible cloning issues: Verify clones by restriction digestion and/or sequencing.

Find additional tips, troubleshooting help, and resources within our Protein Expression Support Center.

I am using a mammalian expression vector that has the neomycin resistance gene. Can I use neomycin for stable selection in mammalian cells?

No; neomycin is toxic to mammalian cells. We recommend using Geneticin (a.k.a. G418 Sulfate), as it is a less toxic and very effective alternative for selection in mammalian cells.

Is it okay if my construct has an ATG that is upstream of the ATG in my gene of interest? Will it interfere with translation of my gene?

Translation initiation will occur at the first ATG encountered by the ribosome, although in the absence of a Kozak sequence, initiation will be relatively weak. Any insert downstream would express a fusion protein if it is in frame with this initial ATG, but levels of expressed protein are predicted to be low if there is a non-Kozak consensus sequence. If the vector contains a non-Kozak consensus ATG, we recommend that you clone your gene upstream of that ATG and include a Kozak sequence for optimal expression.

What is the difference between pcDNA3.1 vectors and the pcDNA3.3-TOPO vector?

pcDNA3.1 vectors contain the core CMV promoter that is truncated before the start of transcription, whereas the pcDNA 3.3-TOPO vector has the 672 bp native CMV promoter. This native CMV promoter allows high-level gene expression with two- to five-fold higher protein yields compared to other expression vectors. pcDNA3.1 vectors are available in restriction, TOPO, and Gateway cloning versions and as untagged and epitope-tagged versions, whereas the pcDNA3.3-TOPO vector is a TOPO TA-adapted, untagged vector that can be used to express native proteins without extraneous amino acids, and is hence ideal for antibody production and structural biology.

Citations & References (9)

Citations & References
Abstract
RasGRP4, a new mast cell-restricted Ras guanine nucleotide-releasing protein with calcium- and diacylglycerol-binding motifs. Identification of defective variants of this signaling protein in asthma, mastocytosis, and mast cell leukemia patients and demonstration of the importance of RasGRP4 in mast cell development and function.
Authors: Yang Yi; Li Lixin; Wong Guang W; Krilis Steven A; Madhusudhan M S; Sali Andrej; Stevens Richard L;
Journal:J Biol Chem
PubMed ID:11956218
'A cDNA was isolated from interleukin 3-developed, mouse bone marrow-derived mast cells (MCs) that contained an insert (designated mRasGRP4) that had not been identified in any species at the gene, mRNA, or protein level. By using a homology-based cloning approach, the approximately 2.6-kb hRasGRP4 transcript was also isolated from the ... More
Gemin5, a novel WD repeat protein component of the SMN complex that binds Sm proteins.
Authors: Gubitz Amelie K; Mourelatos Zissimos; Abel Linda; Rappsilber Juri; Mann Matthias; Dreyfuss Gideon;
Journal:J Biol Chem
PubMed ID:11714716
'The survival of motor neurons (SMN) protein is the product of the disease gene of spinal muscular atrophy and is found both in the cytoplasm and the nucleus, where it is concentrated in gems. SMN is part of a multi-protein complex that includes Gemin2, Gemin3, and Gemin4. The SMN complex ... More
Subcellular targeting of RGS9-2 is controlled by multiple molecular determinants on its membrane anchor, R7BP.
Authors:Song JH, Waataja JJ, Martemyanov KA,
Journal:J Biol Chem
PubMed ID:16574655
'RGS9-2, a member of the R7 RGS protein family of neuronal RGS (Regulators of G protein Signaling), is a critical regulator of G protein signaling. In striatal neurons, RGS9-2 is tightly associated with a novel palmitoylated protein - R7BP (R7 family Binding Protein). Here we report that R7BP acts to ... More
Functional analysis of the human papillomavirus type 16 E1=E4 protein provides a mechanism for in vivo and in vitro keratin filament reorganization.
Authors:Wang Q, Griffin H, Southern S, Jackson D, Martin A, McIntosh P, Davy C, Masterson PJ, Walker PA, Laskey P, Omary MB, Doorbar J,
Journal:J Virol
PubMed ID:14694114
'High-risk human papillomaviruses, such as human papillomavirus type 16 (HPV16), are the primary cause of cervical cancer. The HPV16 E1=E4 protein associates with keratin intermediate filaments and causes network collapse when expressed in epithelial cells in vitro. Here, we show that keratin association and network reorganization also occur in vivo ... More
Dimerization of the type 4 cAMP-specific phosphodiesterases is mediated by the upstream conserved regions (UCRs).
Authors: Richter Wito; Conti Marco;
Journal:J Biol Chem
PubMed ID:12177055
'The cAMP-specific PDE4 family consists of four genes, each expressed as several splice variants. These variants are termed long and short forms depending on the presence or absence of two unique N-terminal domains called upstream conserved regions 1 and 2 (UCR1 and 2). UCR1 and UCR2 have been shown to ... More