Now I'm in a fly lab and no one's really figured a good way to freeze a fly stock down for long-term storage. So we're left to just accept some degree of background mutation and generally assume that it's not impacting our experiments too much...
Most recently, a transposon jumped from E.coli into my backbone, and I picked it up during sequence. 6kbp added instantly. Absolutely wack.
Can you explain this more? Are you referring to your actual backbone? How did ecoli meet your backbone and why were you sequencing your backbone?
Plasmids are grown inside of bacteria which have their own genome with all sorts of oddities like transposons.
Transposons are 'jumping' bits of dna that can insert themselves (given the right criteria is met).
So a transposon(s) from the E. coli genome inserted itself into the plasmid.
This causes all sorts of problems for people who use them to clone (insert) dna into them.
pmags•10h ago