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  2. Transformation efficiency - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transformation_efficiency

    A transformation efficiency of 1×10 8 cfu/μg for a small plasmid like pUC19 is roughly equivalent to 1 in 2000 molecules of the plasmid used being introduced into cells. In E. coli , the theoretical limit of transformation efficiency for most commonly used plasmids would be over 1×10 11 cfu/μg.

  3. pUC19 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PUC19

    Cells which have been successfully transformed with pUC19 can be differentiated from cells which have not by growing them on media with ampicillin. Only the cells with the plasmid containing amp R will survive. The origin of replication (ori), is derived from the plasmid pMB1. [6] [1] pUC19 is a high copy number plasmid. [3]

  4. Plasmid copy number - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Plasmid_copy_number

    For example, pBR322 is a medium copy number plasmid (~20 copies/cell) from which several high copy number cloning vectors (>100 copies/cell) have been derived by mutagenesis, such as the well known pUC series. [1] This delivers the convenience of high plasmid DNA yields but the additional burden of the high copy number restricts the plasmid size.

  5. PstI - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PstI

    This cleavage yields sticky ends 4 base pairs long. PstI is catalytically active as a dimer. The two subunits are related by a 2-fold symmetry axis which in the complex with the substrate coincides with the dyad axis of the recognition sequence. It has a molecular weight of 69,500 and contains 54 positive and 41 negatively charged residues. [2]

  6. Plasmid - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Plasmid

    The term plasmid was coined in 1952 by the American molecular biologist Joshua Lederberg to refer to "any extrachromosomal hereditary determinant." [11] [12] The term's early usage included any bacterial genetic material that exists extrachromosomally for at least part of its replication cycle, but because that description includes bacterial viruses, the notion of plasmid was refined over time ...

  7. Cloning vector - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cloning_vector

    A cloning vector is a small piece of DNA that can be stably maintained in an organism, and into which a foreign DNA fragment can be inserted for cloning purposes. [1] The cloning vector may be DNA taken from a virus , the cell of a higher organism, or it may be the plasmid of a bacterium.

  8. Talk:Plasmid - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Plasmid

    Plasmid sizes vary from 1 to over 1,000 kbp. I doubt that there are any plasmids smaller than roughly 500 bp. Plasmids vary in size; the smallest plasmid is only 846 bp long and contains only one gene. [1] Markus29 13:37, 6 February 2013 (UTC)

  9. Subcloning - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Subcloning

    The bacterial plasmid is a piece of circular DNA which contains regulatory elements allowing for the bacteria to produce a gene product (gene expression) if it is placed in the correct place in the plasmid. The production site is flanked by two restriction enzyme cutting sites "A" and "B" with incompatible sticky ends.

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