GoldBio’s DH10B Chemically Competent E. coli cells are high efficiency cells, suitable for a wide variety of applications such as cloning and sub-cloning. DH10B Chemically Competent E. coli cells have multiple features including the ?80lacZ?M15 marker, which provides α-complementation of the β-galactosidase gene with blue/white screening protocol. These cells also have the mcrA genotypic marker and the mcrBC, mrr deletion, which allows for cloning of DNA that contains methylcytosine and methyladenine.
Product SpecificationsCompetent cell type: Chemically competentDerivative of: DH10B?Species: E. coliTransformation efficiency: ≥8.2 x 106 cfu/μg pUC19 DNABlue/white screening: Yes
Storage/Handling: This product may be shipped on dry ice. DH10B Chemically Competent E. coli cells should be stored at -80°C, pUC19 Control DNA should be stored at -20°C and recovery medium should be stored at 4°C immediately upon arrival. When stored under the recommended conditions and handled correctly, these products should be stable for at least 1 year from the date of receipt.
Genomic Features
- Φ80lacZΔM15 marker provides α-complementation of the β-galactosidase gene with blue/white screening
- mcrA genotypic marker and the mcrBC, mrr deletion allows for cloning DNA that contains methylcytosine and methyladenine
GenotypeF – mcrA ?(mrr-hsdRMS-mcrBC) endA1 recA1 φ80dlacZ?M15 ?lacX74 araD139 ?(ara, leu)7697 galU galK rpsL (StrR) nupG λ-
Reagents Needed for One Reaction
- 10B chemically competent cells: 50 μl
- DNA (or pUC19 Control, 10 pg/μl): 1 μl
- Recovery medium: 1 ml
Quality ControlTransformation efficiency is tested by using the pUC19 control DNA supplied with the kit and using the protocol given below. Transformation efficiency should be ≥8.2 x 106 CFU/μg pUC19 DNA. Untransformed cells are tested for appropriate antibiotic sensitivity.
General Guidelines
- Handle competent cells gently as they are highly sensitive to changes in temperature or mechanical lysis caused by pipetting.
- Thaw competent cells on ice and transform cells immediately following thawing. After adding DNA, mix by tapping the tube gently. Do not mix cells by pipetting or vortexing.
Calculation of Transformation EfficiencyTransformation Efficiency (TE) is defined as the number of colony forming units (cfu) produced by transforming 1μg of plasmid into a given volume of competent cells.
- TE = Colonies/μg/Dilution
- Colonies = the number of colonies counted
- μg = amount of DNA transformed in μg
- Dilution = total dilution of the DNA before plating
Example: Transform 1 μl of (10 pg/μl) control plasmid into 25 μl of cells, add 975 μl of Recovery Medium. Dilute 10 μl of this in 990 μl of Recovery Medium and plate 50 μl. Count the colonies on the plate the next day. If you count 250 colonies, the TE is calculated as follows:Colonies = 250μg of DNA = 0.00001 Dilution = 10/1000 x 50/1000 = 0.0005 TE = 250/0.00001/0.0005 = 5.0 × 1010