An improved recombineering approach by adding RecA to λ red recombination

J Wang, M Sarov, J Rientjes, J Hu, H Hollak… - Molecular …, 2006 - Springer
J Wang, M Sarov, J Rientjes, J Hu, H Hollak, H Kranz, Y Xie, AF Stewart, Y Zhang
Molecular biotechnology, 2006Springer
Recombineering is the use of homologous recombination in Escherichia coli for DNA
engineering. Of several approaches, use of the λ phage Red operon is emerging as the
most reliable and flexible. The Red operon includes three components: Redα, a 5′ to 3′
exonuclease, Redβ, an annealing protein, and Redλ, an inhibitor of the major E. coli
exonuclease and recombination complex, RecBCD. Most E. coli cloning hosts are recA
deficient to eliminate recombination and therefore enhance thestabulity of cloned DNAs …
Abstract
Recombineering is the use of homologous recombination in Escherichia coli for DNA engineering. Of several approaches, use of the λ phage Red operon is emerging as the most reliable and flexible. The Red operon includes three components: Redα, a 5′ to 3′ exonuclease, Redβ, an annealing protein, and Redλ, an inhibitor of the major E. coli exonuclease and recombination complex, RecBCD. Most E. coli cloning hosts are recA deficient to eliminate recombination and therefore enhance thestabulity of cloned DNAs. However, loss of RecA also impairs general cellular integrity. Here we report that transient RecA co-expression enhances the total numer of successful recombinations in bacterial artificial chromosomes (BACs), mostly because the E. coli host is more able to survive the stresses of DNA transformation procedures. We combined this practical improvement with the advantages of a temperature-sensitive version of the low copy pSC 101 plasmid to develop a protocol that is convenient and more efficient than any recombineering procedure, for use of either double-or single-stranded DNA, published to date.
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