What is the best molar ratio of PCR product:vector to use for TOPO TA cloning? Is there an equation to calculate the quantity to use?
We suggest starting with a molar ratio of 1:1 (insert:vector), with a range of 0.5:1 to 2:1. The quantity used in a TOPO cloning reaction is typically 5-10 ng of a 2 kb PCR product.
Equation:
length of insert (bp)/length of vector (bp) x ng of vector = ng of insert needed for 1:1 (insert:vector ratio)
What is the best ratio of insert:vector to use for cloning? Is there an equation to calculate this?
The optimal ratio is 1:1 insert to vector. Optimization can be done using a ratio of 0.5-2 molecules of insert for every molecule of the vector.
Equation:
length of insert (bp)/length of vector (bp) x ng of vector = ng of insert needed for 1:1 insert:vector ratio
I'm seeing a lot of vector-only colonies when I try to perform a negative control reaction using vector only (no insert) for a TOPO reaction. Is my TOPO vector re-ligating?
Using the vector only for transformation is not a recommended negative control. The process of TOPO-adaptation is not a 100% process, therefore, there will be vector only present in your mix, and colonies will be obtained.
I'm trying to clone in my phosphorylated PCR product into a TOPO vector, and I'm getting no colonies. However, when I clone the same product into a TA vector, everything works perfectly. Why is this?
Phosphorylated products can be TA cloned but not TOPO cloned. This is because the necessary phosphate group is contained within the topoisomerase-DNA intermediate complex of the vector. TOPO vectors have a 3' phosphate to which topoisomerase is covalently bound and a 5' phosphate. Non-TOPO linear vectors (TA and Blunt) have a 3' OH and a 5' phosphate. Phosphorylated products should be phosphatased (CIP) before TOPO cloning.
I'm able to get a lot of colonies, however, none contain my insert of interest. What should I do?
You may be cloning in an artifact. TA and TOPO Cloning are very efficient for small fragments (< 100 bp) present in certain PCR reactions. Gel-purify your PCR product using either a silica-based DNA purification system or electroelution. Be sure that all solutions are free of nucleases (avoid communal ethidium bromide baths, for example.)