pAC-luc-TimRA
(Plasmid
#33133)
-
Depositing Lab
-
Sequence Information
Full plasmid sequence is not available for this item.
Ordering
Item | Catalog # | Description | Quantity | Price (USD) | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Plasmid | 33133 | Standard format: Plasmid sent in bacteria as agar stab | 1 | $85 |
Backbone
-
Vector backbonepAc5.1/V5-His B
-
Backbone manufacturerInvitrogen
-
Modifications to backbonepAc-Luciferase was constructed by ligation of the PCR product containing the Renilla Luciferase gene and an artificial poly-linker sequence into the parent vector.
-
Vector typeInsect Expression, Luciferase
-
Selectable markersHygromycin, Blasticidin
Growth in Bacteria
-
Bacterial Resistance(s)Ampicillin, 100 μg/mL
-
Growth Temperature37°C
-
Growth Strain(s)DH5alpha
-
Copy numberHigh Copy
Gene/Insert
-
Gene/Insert nameTim-RA 3' UTR
-
SpeciesD. melanogaster (fly)
-
Entrez Genetim (a.k.a. Dmel_CG3234, CG3234, Dmel\CG3234, Ritsu, TIM, Tim, Tim-1, dTIM, dTim, dtim, mel_tim, rit, s-tim, tim1)
- Promoter Actin 5C
-
Tag
/ Fusion Protein
- Firefly Luciferase (N terminal on backbone)
Cloning Information
- Cloning method Restriction Enzyme
- 5′ cloning site none (unknown if destroyed)
- 3′ cloning site none (unknown if destroyed)
- 5′ sequencing primer AC5 (Common Sequencing Primers)
Terms and Licenses
-
Academic/Nonprofit Terms
-
Industry Terms
- Not Available to Industry
Trademarks:
- Zeocin® is an InvivoGen trademark.
Depositor Comments
pAc-Luc-TimRA was constructed by amplifying the genomic region containing the clk 3′ UTR plus 300 bases downstream from the annotated end of the mRNA and ligating the PCR product into pAc-Luciferase.
These plasmids were created by your colleagues. Please acknowledge the Principal Investigator, cite the article in which the plasmids were described, and include Addgene in the Materials and Methods of your future publications.
-
For your Materials & Methods section:
pAC-luc-TimRA was a gift from Michael Rosbash (Addgene plasmid # 33133 ; http://n2t.net/addgene:33133 ; RRID:Addgene_33133) -
For your References section:
A role for microRNAs in the Drosophila circadian clock. Kadener S, Menet JS, Sugino K, Horwich MD, Weissbein U, Nawathean P, Vagin VV, Zamore PD, Nelson SB, Rosbash M. Genes Dev. 2009 Sep 15;23(18):2179-91. Epub 2009 Aug 20. 10.1101/gad.1819509 PubMed 19696147