Module IV-Screening of Clones
Module IV-Screening of Clones
Module IV-Screening of Clones
The process of identifying one particular clone containing the gene of interest
from among the very large number of others in the gene library is called
screening.
The identification of specific clone from a DNA library can be carried out by
using either:
Plaque hybridization
Plaque hybridization, also known as Plaque lift, was developed by Benton and
Davis in 1977 and employs a filter lift method applied to phage plaques. This
procedure is successfully applied to the isolation of recombinant phage by
nucleic acid hybridization and probably is the most widely applied method of
library screening.
The method of screening library by plaque hybridization is described below-
• The nitrocellulose filter is applied to the upper surface of agar plates, making
a direct contact between plaques and filter.
• The plaques contain phage particles, as well as a considerable amount of
unpackaged recombinant DNA which bind to the filter.
• The DNA is denatured, fixed to the filter, hybridized with radioactive probes
and assayed by autoradiography.
Advantages
• This method results in a ‘cleaner’ background and distinct signal (less
background probe hybridization) for λ plaque screening due to less DNA
transfer from the bacterial host to the nitrocellulose membrane while lifting
plaques rather than bacterial colonies.
• Multiple screens can be performed from the same plate as plaques can be
lifted several times.
• Screening can be performed at very high density by screening small plaques.
High-density screening has the advantage that a large number of recombinant
clones can be screened for the presence of sequences homologous to the
probe in a single experiment.
Immunoscreening
Developed in 1970
Immunoscreening involves the use of antibodies that specifically
recognize antigenic determinants on the polypeptide.
This technique can be applied to any protein for which an antibody is
available.
The molecular target for recognition is generally an Epitope.
Earlier immunoscreening methods employed radio-labelled primary
antibodies to detect antibody binding to the nitrocellulose sheet.
It is now superseded by antibody sandwiches resulting in highly
amplified signals.
The secondary antibody recognizes the constant region of the primary
antibody and is additionally conjugated to an easily assayable enzyme
(eg- horseradish peroxidase or alkaline phosphatase) which can be
assayed using colorimetric change or emission of light using X-ray film.
Procedure
In this technique, the cells are grown as colonies on master plates and
are then transferred to solid matrix (nitrocellulose sheet)
These colonies are subjected to lysis releasing the protein which bind to
the matrix.
These proteins are treated with a primary antibody which specifically
bind to the protein (antigen). The unbound proteins are washed away.
A secondary antibody is added which specifically binds to the primary
antibody.
The secondary antibody carries an enzyme label bound to it which
converts colorless substrate to colored products. The colonies with
positive results (i.e. colored spots) are identified and sub-cultured.
Restriction digest for screening of clones:
The key is to be strategic about your enzyme choices. You’ll want to pick
enzymes that will give you different sized bands depending on whether the
plasmid contains your insert of interest or not.
For example, choose enzymes that only cut once on either side of the expected
insert. If the plasmid contains your insert, you will see two bands: one
representing your vector backbone and the other representing the insert.
If the plasmid doesn’t contain the insert, you will just see the vector backbone
band. Or, you can choose an enzyme that cuts once in the plasmid backbone
and another enzyme that cuts within the insert. If the plasmid contains the
insert, you will see two bands but if the plasmid doesn’t, you will just see one
band. These are only a few examples of how you can use restriction digest to
screen your clones, but there are many other ways to choose restriction
enzymes for this approach.
Using restriction enzymes to check the presence and direction of your insert is
a precise and easy method for screening colonies. First, restriction
mapping should be performed to identify which restriction enzymes can be
used to easily identify the presence of your insert within the plasmid.
After isolating a plasmid DNA from an overnight bacterial culture, digest the
purified plasmid DNA from recombinant clones using restriction enzymes.
Once digested, run the plasmid on an agarose gel to verify that the vector
backbone and insert are of the expected sizes .
Figure 1. Five minute plasmid DNA digestions with M: Thermo Scientific
GeneRuler Express Ladder, 1: Control, undigested plasmid DNA, 2: FastDigest
EcoRI, 3: FastDigest EcoRI and FastDigest KpnI, 4: FastDigest EcoRI, FastDigest
KpnI and FastDigest SmaI.
Alpha complementation/ Blue White Screening
PCR based Screening
The PCR is widely used to isolate specific DNA sequences from uncloned
genomic DNA and now it has been a useful technique for library
screening.
This method was first demonstrated by Takumi and Lodish in 1994.
The molecular weight of known members of the family can be predicted
and novel mRNAs may give rise to amplification products.
It is more stringent since three oligonucleotides (the two PCR primers,
and the hybridization probe) are required to give a true positive signal.