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Biology

Linear Amplification Mediated PCR – Localization of Genetic Elements and Characterization of Unknown Flanking DNA

Published: June 25, 2014 doi: 10.3791/51543

Summary

Linear-amplification mediated (LAM)-PCR is a method developed to identify the exact positions of integrating viral vectors in the genome. The technique has evolved to be the superior method to study clonal dynamics in gene therapy patients, biosafety of novel vector technologies, T-cell diversity, cancer stem cell models, etc.

Abstract

Linear-amplification mediated PCR (LAM-PCR) has been developed to study hematopoiesis in gene corrected cells of patients treated by gene therapy with integrating vector systems. Due to the stable integration of retroviral vectors, integration sites can be used to study the clonal fate of individual cells and their progeny. LAM- PCR for the first time provided evidence that leukemia in gene therapy treated patients originated from provirus induced overexpression of a neighboring proto-oncogene. The high sensitivity and specificity of LAM-PCR compared to existing methods like inverse PCR and ligation mediated (LM)-PCR is achieved by an initial preamplification step (linear PCR of 100 cycles) using biotinylated vector specific primers which allow subsequent reaction steps to be carried out on solid phase (magnetic beads). LAM-PCR is currently the most sensitive method available to identify unknown DNA which is located in the proximity of known DNA. Recently, a variant of LAM-PCR has been developed that circumvents restriction digest thus abrogating retrieval bias of integration sites and enables a comprehensive analysis of provirus locations in host genomes. The following protocol explains step-by-step the amplification of both 3’- and 5’- sequences adjacent to the integrated lentiviral vector.

Introduction

Linear-amplification mediated PCR (LAM-PCR) allows identifying and characterizing unknown flanking DNA adjacent to known DNA of any origin. More specifically, LAM-PCR has been developed to localize viral vector integration sites (IS) within the host genome1,2. Genetic elements like retroviruses or transposons integrate their genome into the host genome in a (semi-) random manner3-6. In many cases it is decisive to know exactly the position where these vectors integrated. LAM-PCR has been proven to be superior to alternative techniques like ligation-mediated PCR7 and its variants or inverse PCR8. The sensitivity and robustness of this method arises from the initial preamplification of the vector-genome junctions and magnetic selection of amplified PCR products. Like the alternative methods mentioned, LAM-PCR relies on the use of restriction enzymes, introducing a bias into retrieval capacity of IS9-11. Thus, only a subset of the IS repertoire (the integrome) can be detected in one reaction. This bias is minimized by the parallel analysis of a given sample using optimal combinations of restriction enzymes9. Recently, a variant of the technology termed non-restrictive LAM-PCR (nrLAM-PCR) has been developed that circumvents the use of restriction enzymes and allows unbiased genome-wide analysis of a sample in a single reaction9,12.

In the past, LAM-PCR has been used to identify the causative retroviral IS giving rise to leukemia in a few patients in clinical gene therapy trials13-15. Since then, LAM-PCR has been adapted to identify IS from other integrating vectors (lentiviral vectors, transposons) and also to identify integration patterns of passively integrating vectors like adeno-associated vectors (AAV) or integrase-defective lentiviral vectors (IDLV)16-21. Applications of LAM-PCR are wide spread: traditionally, the technique is widely used to study the clonal composition of gene modified cells in patients that have undergone gene therapy or to assess the biosafety of novel vector systems by unraveling their integration behavior15,16,22-24. Recently, LAM-PCR enabled determining specificity and off-target activity of designer nucleases by an IDLV trapping assay25.

Moreover, LAM-PCR allows to easily follow the fate of a transduced cell over time in an organism. This allows to identify proto-oncogenes as well as tumor suppressor genes and also to study hematopoiesis or cancer stem cell biology26-28. Last but not least, LAM-PCR was adapted to study T-cell receptor diversity in humans29 (and unpublished data).

The intrinsic power of the technology is reinforced by linking the method to deep sequencing technologies that allow characterizing millions of unknown flanking DNA with single nucleotide resolution in whole genomes. In the following protocol, we describe step-by step the amplification and identification of flanking unknown DNA exemplarily to identify lentiviral vector IS. Oligonucleotides used in the protocol are listed in Table 1. Extracted DNA or cDNA of any source can be used as DNA template for LAM-PCR and nrLAM-PCR.

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Protocol

1. Preparation of Linker Cassettes (LC)

  1. Mix 40 µl of LC1 oligonucleotide (Table 1), 40 µl of LC2 oligonucleotide (Table 1, with proper restriction enzyme overhang), 110 µl Tris-HCl (100 mM, pH 7.5), and 10 µl 250 mM MgCl2.
  2. Incubate at 95 °C for 5min and let the reaction cool down slowly to room temperature. Add 300 µl H2O and concentrate dsLinker-DNA on a centrifugation filter. Add 80 µl H2O to the eluate and aliquot 10 µl of prepared linker cassette in 0.2 PCR tubes.

2. Preamplification of Vector Genome Junctions

  1. For every sample to be analyzed prepare a 50 µl PCR reaction.
    1. Determine concentration of the DNA samples. Pipette x µl (1-1,000 ng for LAM/100-1,000 ng for nrLAM) of DNA into a 0.2 ml PCR tube. Volume of DNA should be equal in each sample and in the range of 0.5 to 25 µl.
    2. Prepare PCR master mix as described in Table 2. Mix (50 - x) µl of the master mix with each DNA sample in 0.2 ml PCR tubes.
  2. Preamplify vector genome junctions using PCR conditions exemplified in Table 2. After completion of PCR add 0.5 µl Taq Polymerase to each PCR tube and rerun PCR program. PCR products can be stored at 4 °C for up to 4 days or long term at -20 °C.

3. Magnetic Separation of PCR Product

  1. Preparation of Magnetic Beads
    1. Pipette 20 µl (200 µg) of streptavidin coated magnetic beads into a 1.5 ml tube and expose for 1 min on the magnetic particle separator (MPS) at room temperature. Discard supernatant.
    2. Remove tube from MPS and resuspend magnetic beads in 40 µl PSB/ 0.1% BSA (pH 7.5). Expose to MPS for 1 min and discard supernatant. Repeat this step once.
    3. Wash beads with 20 µl of 3 M LiCl solution (3 M LiCl, 10 mM Tris-HCl, 1 mM EDTA) expose to MPS for 1 min and discard supernatant. Resuspend beads in 50 µl of 6 M LiCl solution (6 M LiCl, 10 mM Tris-HCl, 1 mM EDTA).
  2. Mix entire PCR reaction from step 2.2 with 50 µl of prepared magnetic beads. Incubate on a horizontal shaker (300 rpm) at least for 2 hr at room temperature. This step allows binding of biotinylated PCR product to streptavidin coated beads (DNA-Bead complex). DNA bead complex can be incubated on the shaker overnight or stored at 4 °C for up to 4 days.
  3. Expose DNA-Bead complex to MPS for 1 min at room temperature, remove supernatant, and resuspend DNA-Bead complex in 100 µl H2O. Immediately proceed with step 4 for LAM or step 5 for nrLAM.

4. LAM-Procedure

  1. Double Strand DNA (dsDNA) Synthesis (LAM only)
    1. Expose DNA-Bead complex from step 3.3 to MPS for 1 min and discard supernatant. Add 8.25 µl of H2O, 1 µl 10x hexanucleotide buffer, 0.25 µl dNTPs (10 mM) and 0.5 µl (2 U) Klenow polymerase. Incubate at 37 °C for 1 hr.
    2. Add 90 µl of H2O and expose to MPS for 1 min. Discard supernatant and resuspend DNA-Bead complex in 100 µl H2O.
  2. Restriction Digest
    1. Expose DNA-Bead complex to MPS for 1 min and discard supernatant. Add 8.5 µl H2O, 1 µl 10x restriction enzyme buffer and 0.5 µl of restriction enzyme and incubate reaction for 1 hr. Repeat step 4.1.2.
      NOTE: Incubate reaction at the temperature recommended by the manufacturer of the restriction enzyme. Make sure that there is no restriction site present within or downstream of the primer binding site used for preamplification in the DNA of interest. For choice of suitable restriction enzymes/restriction enzyme combinations refer to 9.
  3. Ligation of ds Linker (LK)
    1. Expose DNA-Bead complex to MPS for 1 min and discard supernatant. Add 5 µl H2O, 1 µl 10x FastLink buffer, 1 µl ATP (10 mM), 2 µl Linker cassette from step 1.2, and 1 µl Fast-Link DNA Ligase (2 U/µl). Incubate at room temperature for 5 min. Repeat step 4.1.2.
  4. Denaturation of Synthesized dsDNA
    1. Expose DNA-Bead complex to MPS for 1 min and discard supernatant. Resuspend DNA-Bead complex in 5 µl 0.1 N NaOH. Incubate 5 min at room temperature on a horizontal shaker.
    2. Expose DNA-Bead complex to MPS for 1 min and collect preamplified vector-genome junction containing supernatant in new 1.5 ml tube. Immediately proceed with step 6 or store supernatant at -20 °C.

5. nrLAM-Procedure

  1. Ligation of single stranded linker (ssLC) (nrLAM only)
    1. Expose DNA-Bead complex from step 3.3 to MPS for 1 min and discard supernatant. Add 6.5 µl H2O, 1 µl CircLigase 10x Reaction Buffer, 0.5 µl MnCl2 (50 mM), 0.5 µl ATP (1 mM), 1 µl ssLinker oligonucleotide and 0.5 µl CircLigase (100 U/µl). Incubate at 60 °C for 1 hr.
    2. Add 90 µl of H2O and expose to MPS for 1 min. Discard supernatant and wash DNA-Bead complex in 100 µl H2O. Again expose to MPS for 1 min, discard supernatant and resuspend DNA-Bead complex in 10 µl H2O.

6. Exponential Amplification I

  1. For every sample to be analyzed prepare a 50 µl PCR reaction.
    1. Pipette 2 µl template DNA (from step 4.4.2 (LAM) or 5.1.2 (nrLAM)) into a 0.2 ml PCR tube.
    2. Prepare PCR master mix as described in Table 3. Add 48 µl of master mix to each sample from step 6.1.1 and amplify vector genome junctions by PCR conditions exemplified in Table 3. PCR products can be stored at 4 °C for up to 4 days or long term at -20 °C.

7. Magnetic Separation of PCR Product

  1. Prepare magnetic beads as exemplified in steps 3.1.1 - 3.1.3. Resuspend beads in 20 µl (for LAM) or 50 µl (for nrLAM) of 6 M LiCl solution (6 M LiCl, 10 mM Tris-HCl, 1 mM EDTA). Mix 20 µl (LAM) or 50 µl (nrLAM) of PCR reaction from step 6.1.2 with prepared magnetic beads (step 7.1) and incubate on a horizontal shaker (300 rpm) for 2 hr at room temperature. DNA bead complex can be incubated on the shaker overnight or stored at 4 °C for up to 4 days.
  2. Expose DNA-Bead complex to MPS for 1 min, remove supernatant and resuspend DNA-Bead complex in 100 µl H2O. Expose DNA-Bead complex to MPS for 1 min and discard supernatant.
  3. Resuspend DNA-Bead complex in 20 µl (LAM) or 5 µl (nrLAM) 0.1 N NaOH. Incubate for 10 min at room temperature on a horizontal shaker, expose to MPS for 1 min and collect amplified DNA containing supernatant in new 1.5 ml tube. Immediately proceed with step 8.1 or store supernatant at -20 °C.

8. Exponential Amplification II

  1. For every sample to be analyzed prepare a 50 µl PCR reaction.
    1. Pipette 2 µl template DNA (from step 7.3) into a 0.2 ml PCR tube.
    2. Prepare PCR master mix as described in Table 4. Add 48 µl of master mix to each sample from step 8.1.1 and amplify vector genome junctions by PCR conditions exemplified in Table 4. PCR products can be stored at 4 °C for up to 4 days or long term at -20 °C.
  2. To visualize (nr)LAM-PCR products, load 10 µl of the PCR product from step 8.1.2 on a 2% agarose gel. If bands are visible, analyze 10 µl of the LAM-PCR product on high-resolution gel. CAUTION: Ethidium bromide is mutagenic. Work very carefully and always wear appropriate gloves.

9. Preparation for High-throughput Sequencing

  1. Purification of (nr)LAM-PCR products
    1. Mix 40 µl PCR-Product from step 8.1.2 with 44 µl of room temperature AMPure XP Magnetic Beads. Incubate 5 min at room temperature and expose to MPS for additional 2 min.
    2. Discard supernatant and wash twice with 200 µl 70% EtOH on the MPS.
    3. Discard supernatant and resuspend DNA-Bead complex in 30 µl H2O. Incubate 1 min and transfer supernatant to fresh 0.2 ml tube. Determine concentration of purified DNA.
  2. Fusionprimer PCR to add sequencing specific adaptors.
    1. For every sample to be analyzed prepare a 50 µl PCR reaction.
    2. Pipette x µl (40 ng) of DNA into a 0.2 ml PCR tube. Volume of DNA should be equal in each sample and in the range of 0.5 to 25 µl.
    3. Prepare PCR master mix as described in table 5. Add (50 - x) µl of master mix to each sample from step 9.2.2 and introduce Sequencing adaptors to (nr)LAM-PCR products by PCR conditions exemplified in Table 5. PCR products can be stored at 4 °C for up to 4 days or long term at -20 °C.
    4. To visualize Fusionprimer-PCR products load 10 µl of the PCR product from step 9.2.3 on a 2% agarose gel. Purify remaining PCR product as described in steps 9.1.1 - 9.1.3. Analyze 1 µl purified PCR product from step 9.4 on an automated high-resolution electrophoresis device to accurately quantify concentration and fragment size of Fusionprimer-PCR products.

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Representative Results

LAM-PCR results in amplification of vector genome junctions with a defined fragment size for each junction. The size of individual PCR fragments depends on the distance between the location of the known DNA in the genome and the closest restriction enzyme recognition site. This allows visualizing the diversity of amplified junctions in analyzed samples by gel electrophoresis, e.g., if only single (monoclonal), several (oligoclonal), or multiple (polyclonal) bands are present on the gel. The results of LAM-PCR are best viewed by high resolution electrophoresis gels (Figure 2A) but can also be visualized on 2% agarose gels (Figure 2B). nrLAM-PCR results in PCR fragments of various length for each individual junction. Thus monoclonal, oligoclonal or polyclonal samples appear as a smear by electrophoresis and cannot be distinguished visually. Visualizing the nrLAM-PCR product on 2% agarose gel is sufficient to determine success of the protocol (Figure 2C). After sequencing the recovered genomic DNA can be aligned to the respective host genome to identify exact positions of the location of the vector (Figure 3A). Annotation of the genome allows to analyze the IS repertoire for different vector specific features like preference for integration into gene coding regions (Figure 3B) or close to transcription start sites (Figure 3C).

Figure 1
Figure 1. Schematic outline of LAM-PCR and nrLAM-PCR. A) Both methods start with an initial preamplification of vector genome junctions using biotinylated primers hybridizing close to the end of the known DNA sequence (here long terminal repeat (LTR) of a retroviral vector). Preamplification results in biotinylated ssDNA of different size for identical or different vector genome junctions. Biotinylated ssDNA is captured on magnetic particles. B) For LAM PCR, enzymatic reaction steps composed of dsDNA synthesis, restriction digest and ligation of a known linker DNA generate products of different sizes with known sequences on both ends of the product. Due to restriction length polymorphism each amplified junction has a characteristic length. After denaturation the LAM-PCR product is amplified by nested PCR with linker and vector specific primers. C) For nrLAM a ssDNA linker sequence is directly ligated to the unknown end of the preamplified ssDNA from A) allowing exponential amplification by nested PCR with linker and vector specific primers. This figure has been modified from 2,12. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.

Figure 2
Figure 2. Representative results of LAM- PCR and nrLAM-PCR. A, B) LAM-PCR analysis of isolated DNA from peripheral blood of gene therapy treated patients. The number of bands on the gel corresponds to the number of IS present in the sample. High-resolution gels (B) are better suited to visualize clonality of analyzed samples than 2% agarose gels (A). C) nrLAM-PCR analysis of lentiviral vector transduced single cell clones or bulk cells. Independent of the number of amplified insertion sites a smear is seen on the gel after electrophoresis. M, 100 bp ladder; MC, monoclonal; OC, oligoclonal; PC, polyclonal. This figure has been modified from 2,9.

Figure 3
Figure 3. Representative examples for IS analysis by LAM-PCR and subsequent high-throughput sequencing. IS distribution in two patients from gammaretroviral (blue) or lentiviral (green) clinical gene therapy trials. After sequencing and mapping of LAM-PCR products to the respective genome IS can be evaluated e.g.: A) Genome-wide distribution of IS. B) Difference according to the preference for insertion into gene coding regions between gammaretroviral and lentiviral vectors and C) preference for insertion close to transcription start sites. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.

Purpose Name Sequence (5'-3')
LK-universal LC1 GACCCGGGAGATCTGAATTCAGTGGCACAG
CAGTTAGG
LK-AATT LC2 (AATT) AATTCCTAACTGCTGTGCCACTGAATTCA
GATC
LK-CG LC2 (CG) CGCCTAACTGCTGTGCCACTGAATTCAGATC
LK-TA LC2 (TA) TACCTAACTGCTGTGCCACTGAAATCAGATC
LK-nrLAM-PCR ssLC (P)CCTAACTGCTGTGCCACTGAATTCAGATC
TCCCGGGTddC
Preamplification LTR-I (3'-direction) (B)AGTAGTGTGTGCCCGTCTGT
LTR-I (5'-direction) (B)TTAGCCAGAGAGCTCCCAGG
Exponential amplification I LTR-II (3'-direction) (B)GTGTGACTCTGGTAACTAGAG
LTR-II (5'-direction) (B)GATCTGGTCTAACCAGAGAG
LC-I GACCCGGGAGATCTGAATTC
Exponential amplification II LTR-III (3'-direction) GATCCCTCAGACCCTTTTAGTC
LTR-III (5'-direction) CCCAGTACAAGCAAAAAGCAG
LC-II GATCTGAATTCAGTGGCACAG

Table 1. Oligonucleotides for LAM- and nrLAM-PCR to amplify lentiviral IS. ssLC is phosphorylated at the 5’-end (P) and has at 3’ didesoxycytidin (ddC) to avoid multimerization of the ssLC during ligation. In general, (nr)LAM-PCR primers should consist of 18-25 nucleotides and should not align to the host genome. Primers for preamplification should be placed as close as possible (≤120 bp) to the 5′ or 3′ end of the vector. Two additional primers for Exponential PCR I and II need to be placed between the primer used for preamplification and the vector end. Primers for preamplification and Exponential PCR I need to be 5’-phosphorylated (P).

Reagent Volume (µl) Concentration PCR Parameters Temperature Time
H2O 43 - x Initial denaturation 95 °C 5 min
Buffer 5 10 x Denaturation 95 °C 45 sec
dNTP 1 10 mM (LAM); 0.5 µM (nrLAM) Annealing 60 °C 45 sec 2 x 50 Cycles
LTR-I 0.5 0.17 µM Elongation 72 °C 60 sec (LAM); 10 sec (nrLAM)
Taq Polymerase 0.5 2.5 U/µl Final Elongation 72 °C 5 min (only LAM)

Table 2. PCR-Conditions for preamplification of vector genome junctions (step 2). Columns 1-3 show the PCR reagents used for amplification of a single DNA sample. Columns 4-6 exemplify the PCR program to preamplify vector genome junctions.

Reagent Volume (µl) Concentration PCR Parameters Temperature Time
H2O 40.5 Initial denaturation 95 °C 5 min
Buffer 5 10 x Denaturation 95 °C 45 sec
dNTP 1 10 mM  Annealing 60 °C 45 sec 35 Cycles
LTR-II 0.5 16.7 µM Elongation 72 °C 60 sec (LAM); 5 sec (nrLAM)
LC-I 0.5 16.7 µM Final Elongation 72 °C 5 min (only LAM)
Taq Polymerase 0.5 2.5 U/µl

Table 3. PCR-Conditions for exponential Amplification I (step 6). Columns 1-3 show the PCR reagents used for exponential amplification of a single DNA sample. Columns 4-6 exemplify the PCR program used to exponentially amplify one sample after Ligation of linker sequence.

Reagent Volume (µl) Concentration PCR Parameters Temperature Time
H2O 40.5 Initial denaturation 95 °C 5 min
Buffer 5 10 x Denaturation 95 °C 45 sec
dNTP 1 10 mM  Annealing 60 °C 45 sec 35 Cycles
LTR-III 0.5 16.7 µM Elongation 72 °C 60 sec (LAM); 5 sec (nrLAM)
LC-II 0.5 16.7 µM Final Elongation 72 °C 5 min
Taq Polymerase 0.5 2.5 U/µl

Table 4. PCR-Conditions for exponential Amplification I (step 8). Columns 1-3 show the PCR reagents used for nested exponential amplification of a single sample. Columns 4-6 exemplify the PCR program used for nested exponential amplification of vector genome junctions from one sample.

Reagent Volume (µl) Concentration PCR Parameters Temperature Time
H2O 42.5 - x Initial denaturation 95 °C 2 min
Buffer 5 10 x Denaturation 95 °C 45 sec
dNTP 1 10 mM  Annealing 58 °C 45 sec 12 Cycles
Fusionprimer A 0.5 10 µM Elongation 72 °C 60 sec 
Fusionprimer B 0.5 10 µM Final Elongation 72 °C 5 min
Taq Polymerase 0.5 2.5 U/µl

Table 5. PCR-Conditions for Fusionprimer-PCR (step 9.2). Columns 1-3 show the PCR reagents used for introduction of sequencing adaptors to (nr)LAM-PCR products. Columns 4-6 exemplify the PCR program used for Fusionprimer-PCR.

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Discussion

The LAM-PCR technique allows identifying unknown DNA sequences that flank a known DNA region. Because of the high sensitivity resulting from preamplification of the junctions with specific primers hybridizing in the known DNA sequence, it is possible to amplify and detect even rare junctions down to the single cell level. Contrary, in a polyclonal situation LAM-PCR is able to amplify thousands of different junctions in one single reaction.

However, due to the use of restriction enzymes only a subfraction of the integrome can be analyzed by LAM-PCR for the presence of junctions with every particular restriction enzyme. Thus, repeated analysis of the same sample with different enzymes is recommended9. If no LAM-PCR amplicons are present on the gel, most likely the distance between the location of the known DNA fragment and the closest recognition site of the chosen restriction enzyme is too large to result in LAM-PCR products9. In this case other enzymes should be used to amplify the junction.

nrLAM is independent of the use of restriction enzymes and therefore represents a highly valuable method to comprehensively characterize sequences flanking a known DNA sequence. Omitting restriction digest from the protocol results in the loss of specific restriction fragment length polymorphism characterizing each amplified junction. Instead every amplified junction is represented by PCR products of various sizes resulting in a smear on the gel after electrophoresis, independent of the diversity of amplified junctions.

Both LAM- and nrLAM-PCR products are perfectly suited for downstream high-throughput sequencing. High-throughput sequencing of (nr)LAM-PCR products and mapping of retrieved raw sequences to the corresponding genome allows characterizing unknown flanking DNA or identifying the exact localization of vector-genome junctions30. By introducing barcode sequences into the fusionprimers several hundreds of LAM-and nrLAM-PCR products can be sequenced in one sequencing run30.

Due to high sensitivity, LAM-PCR is prone to contamination if executed inattentively. Thus, a PCR-grade environment and special attention to clean handling of the protocol is of utmost importance to successfully amplify the unknown flanking DNA without contaminating samples. Therefore, including untransduced genomic DNA and a water control for every PCR reaction as negative controls into the LAM-PCR protocol is strongly recommended. If control samples indicate that cross-contamination occurred during the protocol, the products from every pause point can be used to repeat parts of the protocol. When bands are still present, it is recommended to discard all reagents (e.g., primers, dNTPs, polymerases, etc.) and repeating the (nr)LAM-PCR protocol with new aliquots.

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Disclosures

The authors have nothing to disclose.

Acknowledgments

Funding was provided by the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (SPP1230, grant of the Tumor Center Heidelberg/Mannheim), by the Bundesministerium für Bildung und Forschung (iGene), by the VIth + VIIth Framework Programs of the European Commission (CONSERT, CLINIGENE and PERSIST). We thank Ina Kutschera for demonstrating the protocol technique in the video.

Materials

Name Company Catalog Number Comments
Taq DNA Polymerase Genaxxon Bioscience GmbH M3001.5000 Alternative Taq Polymerases may be used
PCR Buffer Qiagen 201203 Use of this buffer is recommended
dNTP-Mixture Genaxxon Bioscience GmbH M3015.4020 or any other dNTPs
Oligonucleotides (Primers) MWG Biotech HPLC purified
Dynabeads M-280 Streptavidin  Invitrogen 11206D
PBS Gibco 14190-086 0.1% wt/vol BSA
6 M LiCl Roth 3739.1 10 mM Tris-HCl (pH 7.5)/1 mM EDTA
Tris-HCl, pH 7.5 USB Corporation  22637 or any other supplier
EDTA Applichem A1103,0250 or any other supplier
Klenow Polymerase Roche Diagnostics 10104523001
Hexanucleotide mixture Roche Diagnostics 11277081001
Restriction endonuclease NEB or any other supplier
Fast-Link DNA ligation kit Epicentre Biotechnologies LK11025
CircLigase ssDNA Ligase Kit Epicentre Biotechnologies CL4111K
NaOH Sigma-Aldrich 72068 or any other supplier
Agarose LE Roche Diagnostics 11685660001 or any other supplier
TBE buffer Amresco 0658 or any other supplier
Ethidium bromide Applichem A2273,0005 Ethidium bromide is mutagenic
100 bp DNA Ladder Invitrogen 15628-050 or any other DNA ladder
20 mM NaCl Sigma-Aldrich 71393-1L or any other supplier
Magna-Sep Magnetic Particle Separator  Life Technologies K158501 for use with 1.5 ml Tubes
Magna-Sep Magnetic Particle Separator Life Technologies K158696 for use with 96-well plates
Amicon Ultra-0.5, Ultracel-30 membrane Millipore UFC503096
PerfectBlue Gelsystem Midi S PeqLab 40-1515 or other electrophoresis system 
TProfessional 96 Biometra 050-551 or other Thermocycler for 96-well plates
Orbital shaker KS 260 basic IKA 2980200 or other horizontal shaker
PCR softtubes 0.2 ml Biozym Scientific GmbH 711082 or other 0.2 ml PCR tubes
1.5 ml tubes Eppendorf 12682 or other 1.5 ml tubes
Gel documentation system PeqLab or any other gel documentation system
Nanodrop ND-1000 spectrophotometer Thermo Scientific ND-1000
Spreadex EL1200 precast gel Elchrom Scientific 3497
Submerged gel electrophoresis apparatus SEA 2000  Elchrom Scientific 2001E
2100 Electrophoresis Bioanalyzer Agilent Technologies G2939AA

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Linear Amplification Mediated PCR LAM-PCR Gene Therapy Integrating Vector Systems Retroviral Vectors Clonal Fate Proto-oncogene High Sensitivity High Specificity Preamplification Step Biotinylated Vector Specific Primers Solid Phase Magnetic Beads Unknown DNA Known DNA Restriction Digest Integration Sites Comprehensive Analysis Lentiviral Vector
Linear Amplification Mediated PCR – Localization of Genetic Elements and Characterization of Unknown Flanking DNA
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Gabriel, R., Kutschera, I.,More

Gabriel, R., Kutschera, I., Bartholomae, C. C., von Kalle, C., Schmidt, M. Linear Amplification Mediated PCR – Localization of Genetic Elements and Characterization of Unknown Flanking DNA. J. Vis. Exp. (88), e51543, doi:10.3791/51543 (2014).

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