Open Biology (Jan 2015)

Module-based construction of plasmids for chromosomal integration of the fission yeast Schizosaccharomyces pombe

  • Yasutaka Kakui,
  • Tomonari Sunaga,
  • Kunio Arai,
  • James Dodgson,
  • Liang Ji,
  • Attila Csikász-Nagy,
  • Rafael Carazo-Salas,
  • Masamitsu Sato

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1098/rsob.150054
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 5, no. 6

Abstract

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Integration of an external gene into a fission yeast chromosome is useful to investigate the effect of the gene product. An easy way to knock-in a gene construct is use of an integration plasmid, which can be targeted and inserted to a chromosome through homologous recombination. Despite the advantage of integration, construction of integration plasmids is energy- and time-consuming, because there is no systematic library of integration plasmids with various promoters, fluorescent protein tags, terminators and selection markers; therefore, researchers are often forced to make appropriate ones through multiple rounds of cloning procedures. Here, we establish materials and methods to easily construct integration plasmids. We introduce a convenient cloning system based on Golden Gate DNA shuffling, which enables the connection of multiple DNA fragments at once: any kind of promoters and terminators, the gene of interest, in combination with any fluorescent protein tag genes and any selection markers. Each of those DNA fragments, called a ‘module’, can be tandemly ligated in the order we desire in a single reaction, which yields a circular plasmid in a one-step manner. The resulting plasmids can be integrated through standard methods for transformation. Thus, these materials and methods help easy construction of knock-in strains, and this will further increase the value of fission yeast as a model organism.

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