Preparation of 32P-End-Labeled DNA Fragments for Performing DNA-Binding Experiments
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Published:2013-05
Issue:5
Volume:2013
Page:pdb.prot074336
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ISSN:1940-3402
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Container-title:Cold Spring Harbor Protocols
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Cold Spring Harb Protoc
Author:
Carey Michael F.,Peterson Craig L.,Smale Stephen T.
Abstract
The generation of a uniquely 32P-end-labeled DNA fragment is essential for DNA-binding experiments such as DNase I footprinting and ethylation interference. We describe here a protocol for end-labeling a restriction fragment. For a plasmid DNA bearing a region containing the binding site of interest, cleaving with a single restriction endonuclease generates a 5′ overhang containing a phosphate. This is generally necessary for both common forms of fragment end-labeling: phosphorylation with polynucleotide kinase and “filling in the end” with DNA polymerases (e.g., Klenow fragment). For the phosphorylation reaction, as described here, the phosphate is removed with calf intestinal phosphatase or bacterial alkaline phosphatase, and the resulting free 5′-OH is phosphorylated with polynucleotide kinase and [γ-32P]ATP. This generates a plasmid labeled at each end with γ-32P. The molar amount of plasmid DNA must be below the amount of ATP added to the reaction and the ATP must be of sufficiently high specific activity to generate a fragment labeled to the extent necessary for many DNA-binding experiments. To generate a uniquely end-labeled DNA fragment, the labeled plasmid is heat-treated to inactivate any remaining kinase and recleaved with a second endonuclease, releasing a short DNA fragment and a longer vector fragment. The DNA fragment is purified from the labeled vector on a 5%–8% native polyacrylamide gel. The preparation and labeling of DNA restriction fragments typically takes 1–2 d.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Subject
General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology
Cited by
2 articles.
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