Abstract

A procedure is described for the isolation and purification of the DNA of plasmids that are indigenous to the agriculturally important nitrogen-fixing bacterium Rhizobium meliloti. The procedure involves the lysis of bacteria with an ionic detergent or a mixture of ionic and nonionic detergents, the extraction of total DNA from precipitated membrane-DNA complexes, the enrichment of supercoiled plasmid DNA by the selective alkaline denaturation of chromosomal DNA, and a further purification of plasmid DNA using cesium chloridepropidium diiodide gradients. This procedure yields pure plasmid DNA in amounts of 30 to 50 μg per liter of a culture of cell density of approximately one A550 unit. The DNA thus obtained has been found to be of sufficient purity to serve as substrate for the most commonly used restriction endonucleases.

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