This Protocol is listed in the following Categories:
Cell and tissue culture, Genetic modification, Nucleic acid based molecular biology

Author(s): Hiroyuki Konishi
Affiliation(s): Department of Oncology, The Sidney Kimmel Comprehensive Cancer Center, The Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine
DOI: 10.1038/nprot.2007.409

A PCR-based high-throughput screen with multiround sample pooling: application to somatic cell gene targeting

Here, we describe a method of systematic PCR screening with multiround sample pooling for the isolation of rare PCR-positive samples. As an example, we have applied this protocol to the recovery of gene-targeted clones in human somatic cells comprising only 0.02–0.17% of cells transduced with targeting vectors. Initially, cells infected with targeting vectors are seeded and grown in fourteen 96-well tissue culture plates. Samples are then collected from these plates and subjected to two rounds of pooling to yield twelve 'superpools' used for an initial PCR. After identifying PCR-positive samples, de-pooling is carried out with successive rounds of PCR screening, using samples of decreasing complexity. Single-cell cloning is subsequently performed to isolate gene-targeted clones. The entire protocol can be completed in 4–8 weeks depending on the proliferative capacity of the cell line.

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