Difference between revisions of "Team:William and Mary/3GProtocols"

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3G assembly is a new and cutting edge hybrid method of DNA assembly first described in 2018 by A. D. Halleran, A. Swaminathan and R. M, Murray [1] combines Golden Gate and Gibson to allow for modular assembly of multi-part circuits in a single day. In this method circuits are composed of modular transcriptional units constructed using Golden Gate Assembly. These transcriptional units are amplified with PCR, purified via gel extraction, then combined into a circuit using Gibson Assembly.
 
  
  

Revision as of 21:35, 14 October 2018

Page Title

3G Assembly Protocols

Overview
3G assembly is a new and cutting edge hybrid method of DNA assembly first described in 2018 by A. D. Halleran, A. Swaminathan and R. M, Murray [1] combines Golden Gate and Gibson to allow for modular assembly of multi-part circuits in a single day. In this method circuits are composed of modular transcriptional units constructed using Golden Gate Assembly. These transcriptional units are amplified with PCR, purified via gel extraction, then combined into a circuit using Gibson Assembly.
References
[1] Single Day Construction of Multigene Circuits with 3G Assembly Andrew D. Halleran, Anandh Swaminathan, and Richard M. Murray. ACS Synthetic Biology 2018 7 (5), 1477-1480. DOI: 10.1021/acssynbio.8b00060