
Working with Plasmids
Transformation of DNA
Preparation of competent E. coli
Cells that have the ability to take up DNA (from a variety of sources) are termed “competent”. Several techniques exist to prepare competent cells and one such technique for preparing competent E. coli is given below.
Note: Cells prepared using this protocol are not suitable for electroporation.
Materials required:
- E. coli cells in glycerol stock vial
- LB medium
- LB-agar plates
- Appropriate selective antibiotics
- TFB1 buffer (see table, Buffer TFB1)
- TFB2 buffer (see table, Buffer TFB2)
Buffer TFB1
Buffer TFB2
- Remove a trace of E. coli cells from the glycerol stock vial with a sterile toothpick or inoculating loop, and streak it out on LB-agar plates containing an appropriate concentration of the relevant selective antibiotic(s) (see Antibiotics). If the host strain has already been cultured and stored at 2–8°C (cultures can be stored at 2–8°C for up to 3 months without any significant loss of viability), streak out bacteria from those stocks.
- Incubate at 37°C overnight.
- Pick a single colony and inoculate 10 ml LB medium containing relevant antibiotic(s). Grow overnight at 37°C
- Add 1 ml overnight culture to 100 ml prewarmed LB medium containing the relevant antibiotic(s) in a 500 ml flask, and shake at 37°C until an OD600 of 0.5 is reached (approximately 90–120 min).
- Cool the culture on ice for 5 min, and transfer the culture to a sterile, round-bottom centrifuge tube
- Collect the cells by centrifugation at low speed (5 min, 4000 x g, 4°C).
- Discard the supernatant carefully. Always keep the cells on ice.
- Resuspend the cells gently in cold (4°C) TFB1 buffer (30 ml for a 100 ml culture) and keep the suspension on ice for an additional 90 min.
- Collect the cells by centrifugation (5 min, 4000 x g, 4°C).
- Discard the supernatant carefully. Always keep the cells on ice.
- Resuspend the cells carefully in 4 ml ice-cold TFB2 buffer.
- Prepare aliquots of 100–200 µl in sterile microcentrifuge tubes and freeze in liquid nitrogen or a dry-ice–ethanol mix. Store the competent cells at –70°C.
Transformation of competent E. coli
Transformation is the process in which plasmid DNA is introduced into a bacterial host cell. Several methods exist for transformation of bacterial cells, one of which is given below.
- Competent E. coli cells (see Preparation of competent E. coli)
- SOC medium (see table SOC medium)
- LB-agar plates (see Solid media)
SOC medium
- Transfer an aliquot of the DNA to be transformed (10 µl or less) into a cold sterile 1.5 ml microcentrifuge tube, and keep it on ice.
- Thaw an aliquot of frozen competent E. coli cells on ice.
- Gently resuspend the cells and transfer 100 µl of the cell suspension into the microcentrifuge tube with the plasmid DNA, mix carefully, and keep on ice for 20 min.
- Transfer the tube to a 42°C water bath or heating block for 90 s
- Add 500 µl SOC medium to the cells and incubate for 60–90 min at 37°C.
Tip: Shaking increases transformation efficiency. - Plate out 50, 100, and 200 µl aliquots on LB-agar plates containing the relevant antibiotic(s). Incubate the plates at 37°C overnight until colonies develop.