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Therapeutics & Diagnostics 25-019

DNA Assembly Kit for Multi-Fragment Cloning and Large Construct Synthesis

This illustration demonstrates the innovative assembly method that enables efficient, multi-fragment DNA construction for advanced genetic engineering.

Tech ID

25-019

Inventors

Cécile Fradin
Shariful Sakib

Patent Status

US Provisional Patent Application filed

Stage of Research

Proof of concept available

Contact

Rimika Sachdeva
Business Development Officer

Abstract

Versatile isothermal DNA assembly techniques can join multiple DNA fragments with homologous ends in a single reaction. Although these methods are theoretically ideal for constructs of any complexity (Gibson et al., 2009), practical challenges such as assembling even 2–3 fragments into plasmids over 5–6 kbp, coupled with insufficient sample preparation protocols, often force researchers to rely on costly chemical synthesis alternatives. These limitations highlight the need for an optimized and reliable assembly method.

Researchers at McMaster University have developed a streamlined DNA assembly method that enables the successful assembly of up to seven fragments into constructs as large as 14 kbp with minimal DNA and resources. The method integrates optimized enzymatic digests and spin-column purifications, making it robust enough to handle fragments of variable sizes including those that form secondary structures. This method reduces the risks of human error and ensures high success rates, saving time and resources while enabling more complex cloning projects.

Applications

  • Constructing large, complex plasmids for genetic engineering projects or therapeutic research.

Advantages

  • High efficiency: Successfully assembles up to seven fragments (tested so far), creating constructs as large as 14 kbp with minimal DNA and fewer resources compared to standard methods.
  • Ease of use: Streamlined protocols reduce human error, making the method accessible to researchers with little molecular cloning experience.

References

  1. Gibson, D. G., Young, L., Chuang, R. Y., Venter, J. C., Hutchison, C. A., & Smith, H. O. (2009). Enzymatic assembly of DNA molecules up to several hundred kilobases. Nature Methods, 6(5), 343-345. https://doi.org/10.1038/nmeth.1318

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