pCAMBIA Legacy Vectors

Overview

Plant transformation is now routine in hundreds of laboratories worldwide, using bacterially-mediated or direct DNA transfer methods such as bombardment. These methods have both technical and intellectual property limitations (see the TransBacter Project, in which we're improving the alternative to Agrobacterium transformation for more complete freedom to operate). One of the biggest technical limitations laboratories face is that many vectors still used are historical relics with substandard features that make DNA constructions awkward or cumbersome:

general structure

The pCAMBIA vector backbone is derived from the pPZP vectors (constructed by Hajdukiewicz, Svab & Maliga, see References). While not perfect and having technical and IP limitations (see the GUSPlus Project, in which we're improving reporter genes and selection methods for more complete freedom to operate), pCAMBIA vectors offer:

Information on our other vectors, which contain GUSPlus™, may be found in the GUSPlus project . You can request these vectors separately (they are available under the open source terms of a BiOS license) or simultaneously when registering for the TransBacter Project, in which we're improving the alternative to Agrobacterium transformation for more complete freedom to operate and freedom to cooperate.

Our Legacy pCAMBIA vectors, will soon be available under a new MTA with similar conditions to facilitate cooperative development.

The complete kit of 26 legacy CAMBIA vectors includes:

pCAMBIA0380, pCAMBIA0390, pCAMBIA1200, pCAMBIA1201, pCAMBIA1281Z, pCAMBIA1291Z, pCAMBIA1300, pCAMBIA1301, pCAMBIA1302, pCAMBIA1303, pCAMBIA1304, pCAMBIA1380, pCAMBIA1381Xa, pCAMBIA1381Xb, pCAMBIA1381Xc, pCAMBIA1381Z, pCAMBIA1390, pCAMBIA1391, pCAMBIA1391Xa, pCAMBIA1391Xb, pCAMBIA1391Xc, pCAMBIA1391Z, pCAMBIA2200, pCAMBIA2201, pCAMBIA2300, and pCAMBIA2301

Ordering Legacy pCAMBIA

Please visit the CAMBIA materials website to download the request form for the use of pCAMBIA Legacy vectors. For non-profit and research organisations the complete kit of pCAMBIA Legacy vectors costs US$250; individual vectors cost US$150.00 for the first vector and US$75.00 for each additional vector (+ shipping). If you wish to execute a license for the use of materials, please contact us at licenses@cambia.org.

Materials Distribution-Take note of the changes

Please note:

CAMBIA has relocated its labs to Brisbane.

However, the labs are not yet ready.  Therefore, we won't be able to supply materials for now.

We regret the inconvenience that this may cause you.  Once we are back in full operation, we will let you know

Ordering Information

Please visit the CAMBIA materials website to download a materials request form. If you wish to execute a license for the use of materials, please contact us at licenses@cambia.org.

List of Legacy pCAMBIA Vectors

Do-it-yourself vectors

The complete kit of pCAMBIA legacy vectors includes the following plasmids:

pCAMBIA0380, pCAMBIA0390, pCAMBIA1200, pCAMBIA1201, pCAMBIA1281Z, pCAMBIA1291Z, pCAMBIA1300, pCAMBIA1301, pCAMBIA1302, pCAMBIA1303, pCAMBIA1304, pCAMBIA1380, pCAMBIA1381Xa, pCAMBIA1381Xb, pCAMBIA1381Xc, pCAMBIA1381Z, pCAMBIA1390, pCAMBIA1391, pCAMBIA1391Xa, pCAMBIA1391Xb, pCAMBIA1391Xc, pCAMBIA1391Z, pCAMBIA2200, pCAMBIA2201, pCAMBIA2300, and pCAMBIA2301

To order click here

These vectors are discussed in more detail below:

pCAMBIA0380; pCAMBIA0390

These vectors contain a range of restriction sites on either side of the pUC8 (0380) or pUC9 (0390) polylinker, making them suitable for advanced construction purposes with users inserting their own promoters, selection genes, reporter genes, etc. The only functional signals between the T-DNA borders are the start and stop codons, the histidine tag, and the NOS-poly(A) signal. All the standard features of the pCAMBIA backbone are present: kanamycin bacterial selection, high copy number in E. coli, and stable replication in A. tumefaciens.

Minimal Selection Vectors

pCAMBIA1200; pCAMBIA1300; pCAMBIA1380; pCAMBIA1390; pCAMBIA2200; pCAMBIA2300

Researchers wanting the latest versions should see pCAMBIA 1305.1, pCAMBIA1105.1 or pCAMBIA 1305.2, which can be requested through the GUSPlus Project. Information on the older pCAMBIA vectors is here for convenience.

These vectors contain minimal heterologous sequences for plant transformation and selection of transformants; they allow insertion of desired genes for transformation into plants but require all promoter and terminator sequences for plant expression of newly cloned genes.

The minimal selection vectors have one of two plant selection genes: hptII encoding resistance to hygromycin, or nptII encoding resistance to kanamycin. In both cases the selection gene is driven by a double-enhancer version of the CaMV35S promoter. These genes have been subjected to site-directed mutagenesis to eliminate interfering restriction sites within the coding sequence by silent changes. Two different bacterial resistance markers are provided (kanamycin or chloramphenicol), allowing a broad range of Agrobacterium or E. coli strains to be used. The pUC18 polylinker within the lacZa fragment allows blue/white screening of clones in E. coli cloning work.

pCAMBIA1380 and 1390 are based on pCAMBIA1300, but the pUC18 polylinker-lacZa fragment has been deleted and replaced with the simpler pUC8 (1380) and pUC9 (1390) polylinkers, which do not contain potentially confounding start or stop codons. The full modular format is provided for convenient PCR cloning and gene expression.

For researchers performing promoter analysis the use of the minimal vector containing GUSPlus (pCAMBIA 0305.2, which can be ordered through the GUSPlus Project) is recommended, rather than any of the other pCAMBIA vectors. Co-transformation strategies are desirable to physically separate in the transformed plant genome the promoter of the plant selection gene (usually 35S) and the promoter of interest (often much weaker or more specific) driving a gus or other reporter gene. The way that we have been doing this for years is that two vectors are separately transformed into the same strain of Agrobacterium (or more preferably strains from the TransBacter Project, for freedom to operate), but obviously co-transformation can also be done by simultaneously transforming with two separate isolates each containing one of the vectors. If using one isolate, single colonies are selected, the plasmid DNA analysed, the cells induced on special media (if required for your plant species), and the two cell lines are mixed together immediately prior to application onto the plant tissues to be transformed. In our hands this method gives 10-30% of transformed plant lines containing both T-DNAs.

Gus Intron Selection vectors

pCAMBIA1201; pCAMBIA1301; pCAMBIA2201; pCAMBIA2301

Researchers wanting the latest versions should see pCAMBIA 1305.1, pCAMBIA1105.1 or pCAMBIA 1305.2, which can be requested through the GUSPlus Project. Information on the older pCAMBIA vectors is here for convenience.

These vectors contain a fully functional gusA reporter construct for simple and sensitive analysis of gene function or presence in regenerated plants by GUS assay. The construct uses E.coli gusA (N358Q — to avoid N-linked glycosylation) with an intron (from the castor bean catalase gene) inside the coding sequence to ensure that expression of glucuronidase activity is derived from eukaryotic cells, not from expression by residual A.tumefaciens cells. The gusA reporter gene is cloned in new modular format. These plasmids are suitable for insertion of other genes of interest containing their own promoter and terminator. Researchers can excise the gusA gene and insert their own gene of interest in its place or use these vectors to create fusions of gusA with their gene of interest (if you have created a pCAMBIA vector derivative that other researchers will find useful, please let us know). These vectors contain the pUC18 polylinker-lacZa and the same bacterial and plant selection genes as their corresponding Minimal Selection Vectors.

GFP Selection vectors

pCAMBIA1302; pCAMBIA1303; pCAMBIA1304

For those desiring the best of both worlds in reporter genes we constructed these vectors, similar in utility to the GUS Intron Selection Vectors (GIS), but including GFP. Being a non-catalytic protein places an intrinsic limit on detection sensitivity with fluorescent proteins and expensive equipment is needed for quantitative assays and microscopic observation. GFP is nonetheless popular as a reporter gene and we provide it cloned in full New Modular format for those wishing to use it.

These vectors are based on pCAMBIA1301 (bacterial kanamycin resistance, plant hygromycin selection, pUC18 polylinker in lacZa) but contain the mgfp5 version of the Aequoria victoria green fluorescent protein (Siemering et al., 1996) either alone - pCAMBIA1302 - or in translational fusion with gusA (N358Q) in both arrangements: pCAMBIA1303 has a gusA-mgfp5-His6 fusion, and pCAMBIA1304 has a mgfp5-gusA-His6 fusion. These are intronless versions of gusA (N358Q), so there is the possibility that expression in primary transformants is the result of expression of the reporter proteins by residual Agrobacterium tumefaciens cells or other bacteria present in plant cultures.

Analysis of large numbers of transformants of rice and Arabidopsis at CAMBIA showed that the fluorescence produced by the MGFP5 protein was quite faint. As a result of this our researchers constructed similar constructs using the egfp gene available from Clontech. Results with these proteins were far superior and, although we are unable to distribute vectors containing this gene, we recommend that researchers purchase pEGFP from Clontech and use this to construct their own plasmids analogous to pCAMBIA1302, pCAMBIA1303 or pCAMBIA1304. If you have created a pCAMBIA vector derivative that other researchers will find useful, please let us know .

Fuse and Use vectors

pCAMBIA1381 and 1391 and their Xa, b, c ORF variants

Designed to utilize gusA as a true reporter of gene expression by fusion construction, these vectors are derived from pCAMBIA1380 and 1390, and contain a promoterless, non-intron gusA (N358Q) gene (without an initiation codon) in three reading frames, and with either pUC8 or pUC9 oriented polylinkers. This permits simple construction of carboxy-terminus protein fusions to gusA. Plant selection is with hygromycin, and bacterial selection with kanamycin.

The pCAMBIA1381 and 1391 vectors may also be used for construction of transcriptional or translational fusions to gusA. They are similar to the Xa, b, c series though they retain the initiation codon of the NcoI site in the New Modular structure around the gusA (N358Q) gene, and are only available in one reading frame.

If you have created a pCAMBIA vector derivative that other researchers will find useful, please let us know.

Promoter Cloner vectors™

pCAMBIA1281Z; pCAMBIA1291Z; pCAMBIA1381Z; pCAMBIA1391Z

Designed for promoter testing in planta, these vectors feature a promoterless version of gusA (N358Q) with the catalase intron immediately downstream of a truncated lacZa containing either the pUC8 or pUC9 polylinker. All plasmids in this series have hygromycin as the plant selection gene, and bacterial selection is available with either chloramphenicol (1281Z, 1291Z) or kanamycin (1381Z, 1391Z). The truncated lacZa is functional for blue/white screening of clones in suitable E.coli host strains.

Experience with these vectors has shown that the very strong 35S promoter (in fact a double-enhancer version of it) which drives the hptII gene in the T-DNA of these and most other pCAMBIAs causes significant interference in the expression patterns observed. Interpret your results with caution! Negative control transformants created using one of these vectors without a promoter added upstream of the gusA gene show low to moderate level GUS expression in a range of tissues. Enhancer-trap experiments performed at CAMBIA using somewhat rearranged versions of these vectors have also shown consistent interfering expression which we attribute to the nearby 35S promoter. This artefactual expression may be exacerbated in experiments where researchers attempt to analyse trimmed-down versions of their promoters of interest lacking the natural insulating sequences of full-length promoters.

To avoid this 35S-interference from promoter analyses, we recommend using co-transformation strategies as described above in the section on the Minimal Selection Vectors.

In such a strategy the promoter of interest can be cloned into one of our Promoter Cloner Vectors, but this should first be modified by performing a SmaI & XmnI double digestion, gel purification of the large (~8.9kb) backbone fragment, and self-ligation. Such a vector might be called pCAMBIA0381Z, but we have never constructed it for distribution as part of the pCAMBIA vector kit. If you have created a pCAMBIA vector derivative that other researchers will find useful, please let us know.

Nomenclature of Legacy pCAMBIA vectors

The four digit numbering system works as follows:

Notes

Quick-pick table

(clicking on a plasmid number will navigate to the Genbank file)

pCAMBIA

Plant Selection Gene

Bacterial Selection Gene

Polylinker

Reporter Gene

T-DNA size (bp)

Reading Frame or lacZ

Vector family

Map PDF Icon

2301

nptII

kan

pUC18

gusA

5391

-

GIS

view map

2300

nptII

kan

pUC18

-

2512

-

MSV

view map

2201

nptII

cmr

pUC18

gusA

5391

-

GIS

view map

2200

nptII

cmr

pUC18

-

2512

-

MSV

view map

1405.1

hptII

kan+ spec/strep

pUC18

gus plus

5593

lacZ

GIS

view map

1391

hptII

kan

pUC9

gusA

4427

-

FUV

view map

1391Z

hptII

kan

pUC9

gusA

4984

lacZ

PCV

view map

1391Xc

hptII

kan

pUC9

gusA

-

c

FUV

view map

1391Xb

hptII

kan

pUC9

gusA

-

b

FUV

view map

1391Xa

hptII

kan

pUC9

gusA

-

a

FUV

view map

1390

hptII

kan

pUC9

-

2630

-

MSV

view map

1381

hptII

kan

pUC8

gusA

4427

-

FUV

view map

1381Z

hptII

kan

pUC8

gusA

4984

lacZ

PCV

view map

1381Xc

hptII

kan

pUC8

gusA

-

c

FUV

view map

1381Xb

hptII

kan

pUC8

gusA

-

b

FUV

1381Xa

hptII

kan

pUC8

gusA

-

a

FUV

view map

1380

hptII

kan

pUC8

-

2630

-

MSV

view map

1304

hptII

kan

pUC18

gfp:gusA

6128

-

GFP

view map

1303

hptII

kan

pUC18

gusA:gfp

6128

-

GFP

view map

1302

hptII

kan

pUC18

gfp

4316

-

GFP

view map

1301

hptII

kan

pUC18

gusA

5607

-

GIS

view map

1300

hptII

kan

pUC18

-

2728

-

MSV

view map

1291Z

hptII

cmr

pUC9

gusA

4984

lacZ

PCV

view map

1281Z

hptII

cmr

pUC8

gusA

4984

lacZ

PCV

view map

1201

hptII

cmr

pUC18

gusA

5606

-

GIS

view map

1200

hptII

cmr

pUC18

-

2727

-

MSV

view map

0390

-

kan

pUC9

-

582

-

DIY

view map

0380

-

kan

pUC8

-

582

-

DIY

view map

CAMBIA Vector Cloning Strategy and Trouble Shooting

A few points about the pCAMBIA cloning strategy:

The pUC18 polylinker was used in some vectors, but pUC8 and pUC9 polylinkers were also used to simplify the choice of cloning enzyme. In the age of PCR, it is no longer necessary to have a large number of cloning sites. The smaller polylinkers also eliminate potential conflicts from sites such as SphI (which has an ATG) or XbaI (which has a TAG). This makes other sites in the vector more useful (such as the SphI site outside the right T-DNA Border, or the SacII site outside the left T-DNA Border).

Plant selection genes in the pCAMBIA vectors are driven by a double-enhancer version of the CaMV35S promoter and terminated by the CaMV35S polyA signal. NOTE that this 35S promoter can have an enhancer effect on the expression of other genes in the same cassette, so gene expression results using pCAMBIA derivatives in which portions of this promoter are still present should be interpreted with caution. Furthermore, it is your responsibility to check whether the 35S promoter or any other components you use are subject to patents in your country. You can find help with this at CAMBIA's Patent Lens website.

Reporter genes feature a hexa-Histidine tag at the C-terminus to enable simple purification on immobilised metal affinity chromatography resins. The sequence for this tag occurs between the first NheI site (there is a second NheI site in the pVS1-rep that we didn't eliminate) and the unique PmlI site. Genes of interest may be inserted in place of the reporter gene. Insertion without a stop codon and in frame at the (first) NheI site will append a hexa-Histidine tag to your protein of interest. Insertion without a stop codon and in frame at the PmlI site will append a stop codon. Insertion at the BstEII site will add neither a tag nor a stop codon (so you may want to ensure that a sequence inserted here contains a stop codon).

GeneralStructure

tDNA sequence of pCAMBIA Vectors

The tDNA sequence for pCAMBIA vectors can be downloaded by clicking TDNA v310 (info)

What concentration of antibiotics should I use?

pCAMBIAx1xx vectors with spectinomycin/streptomycin resistance (aadA/aminoglycoside-3??-adenylyltransferase) in bacteria: use 50-100 µg/mL in E.coli & A.tumefaciens

pCAMBIAx2xx vectors with chloramphenicol resistance (cat ? chloramphenicol acetyltransferase from E.coli Tn-cam204) in bacteria: use 10-25 µg/mL in E.coli & A.tumefaciens.

pCAMBIAx3xx vectors with kanamycin resistance (aphIII/nptIII/3?5??-aminoglycoside phosphotransferase typeIII from Enterococcus faecalis pJH1) in bacteria: use 50µg/mL in E.coli & A.tumefaciens.

What concentration of plant selection antibiotic should I use?

Materials and Methods Available from CambiaLabs

 PLEASE NOTE  

Please direct inquiries about materials to materials@cambia.org.  CAMBIA is unfortunately no longer able to provide materials at this time.

Work at CAMBIA has resulted in the design and development of a variety of technologies. Below is a list of the technologies which CAMBIA developed: 

» pCAMBIA binary vectors

More Information:

Legacy pCAMBIA Vector Kit 

pCAMBIA0380, pCAMBIA0390, pCAMBIA1200, pCAMBIA1201, pCAMBIA1281Z, pCAMBIA1291Z, pCAMBIA1300, pCAMBIA1301, pCAMBIA1302, pCAMBIA1303, pCAMBIA1304, pCAMBIA1380, pCAMBIA1381Xa, pCAMBIA1381Xb, pCAMBIA1381Xc, pCAMBIA1381Z, pCAMBIA1390, pCAMBIA1391, pCAMBIA1391Xa, pCAMBIA1391Xb, pCAMBIA1391Xc, pCAMBIA1391Z, pCAMBIA2200, pCAMBIA2201, pCAMBIA2300, and pCAMBIA2301

pCAMBIA Legacy Vectors

Standard GUSPlus Vector kit 

pCAMBIA1105.1, pCAMBIA1305.1, pCAMBIA1305.2, pCAMBIA0305.1, pCAMBIA0305.2, pCAMBIA1105.1R and pCAMBIA0105.1R,

GUSPlus Vector kit 

pCAMBIA1105.1R-RC,   pCAMBIA1105.1-RC, pCAMBIA1105.1U 

pCAMBIA GUSPlus Vectors

» TransBacter  -

Transbacter strains/unitary vectors  

Rhizobium leguminosarum  bv. Trifolii strain ANU845 + pCAMBIA5105 NEW
Rhizobium leguminosarum  bv. Trifolii strain ANU845 + pCAMBIA5106

Sinorhizobium meliloti + pCAMBIA 5105
Sinorhizobium meliloti + pCAMBIA 5106 NEW   

Transbacter strains/ binary vectors

Mesorhizobium loti + pWBTi1 + pCAMBIA1105.1R
Rhizobium sp. NGR 234 + pWBTi1 + pCAMBIA1105.1R
Rhizobium sp. NGR 234 + pWBTi3 + pCAMBIA1105.1R
Sinorhizobium meliloti + pWBTi1 + pCAMBIA1105.1R
Sinorhizobium meliloti + pWBTi3
Sinorhizobium meliloti + pWBTi3 + pCAMBIA1105.1R

Unitary vectors -

pCAMBIA5105
pCAMBIA5106
 

Transbacter materials

» hTERT (human telomerase) cDNA clones - available upon special request

» EASE (Egg Apparatus-Specific Enhancer) sequence and vectors 

pWY063.1

» Transactivation Vectors - not currently available 

pTNT.Q61.3, pTNT.Q60 and pTNT.Q103  

Please email administrative inquiries to materials@cambia.org

Please email specific scientific queries to Dr. Osmat Azzam Jefferson.

Additional Information, References & Resources

Genotypes of some useful Agrobacterium tumefaciens strains

Warning!! Agrobacterium use is constrained in jurisdictions such as the USA, and it may be unwise to use it in any research that might result in a product for sale or import into the USA. You may wish to use the Transbacter system instead for freedom to operate. For information, see the  TransBacter Project.

Types

Antibiotics

Selected References

Other Resources

Looking for pCAMBIA Vector 5105?

If you are looking for pCAMBIA 5105 vector, more information will be found in the Tranbacter Project (look under Unitary Vector listing). It is not a "Legacy Vector".

The information contained in this page was believed to be correct at the time it was collated. New patents and patent applications, altered status of patents, and case law may have resulted in changes in the landscape. CAMBIA makes no warranty that it is correct or up to date at this time and accepts no liability for any use that might be made of it. Corrections or updates to the information are welcome, please send an email to info@bios.net.