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Gibson / HiFi AssemblyFree in-browser calculator

Gibson Assembly Primer Designer.

Design primers for Gibson Assembly and HiFi DNA Assembly cloning. Enter fragment sequences, get primers with optimal binding Tm and overlap extensions. Self-dimer check, IDT CSV export, and shareable URLs.

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Validated2026-04-07
CitableMethods and citation included

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Load example Gibson Assembly primer designer data to see the full workflow

Fragment Sequences (in assembly order)

Enter your DNA fragments in the order they should appear in the final construct (5′ → 3′). At least 2 fragments required. The tool will design forward and reverse primers with overlaps for each junction.

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Settings

Target Tm: 60 ± 3 °C | ~280x Taq (highest fidelity)

1540bp (NEB recommends 15–30)

(e.g., plasmid cloning — last fragment overlaps with first)

When to use

  • Design primers for Gibson Assembly or NEBuilder HiFi cloning of 2–10 fragments
  • Automatically calculate binding region length for optimal Tm (~60 °C)
  • Generate overlap extensions from neighbouring fragment sequences
  • Check primers for self-dimer formation before ordering
  • Export primer sequences in IDT bulk upload CSV format

Do not use for

  • Standard PCR primer design without assembly overlaps — use Primer3 or NEB Tm Calculator
  • Golden Gate Assembly — requires Type IIS restriction sites, not overlaps
  • Restriction enzyme cloning — different primer design logic
  • RNA or modified base primers — this tool assumes standard DNA

Overlap length affects efficiency

Shorter overlaps (15–18 bp) work for simple 2-fragment assemblies but fail for 4+ fragments. Use 25–30 bp overlaps for multi-fragment assemblies.

Only binding Tm matters for PCR

The overlap extension does not anneal during PCR amplification. Set your annealing temperature based on the binding region Tm, not the full primer Tm.

Fragment order is critical

Enter fragments in the order they should appear in the final construct. The tool designs overlaps between adjacent fragments based on this order.

Use high-fidelity polymerase

Q5 or Phusion is recommended for amplifying fragments before Gibson Assembly. Taq errors in the overlap region can prevent assembly.

Gel-purify fragments before assembly

Non-specific PCR products carry incorrect overlaps and create misassemblies. Gel extraction of the correct band before assembly dramatically improves success rates.

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Method

Binding region: walks from 15–35 bp to find length with Tm closest to target (SantaLucia 1998 nearest-neighbour, salt-corrected). Overlap: last N bp of previous fragment (forward) or revcomp of first N bp of next fragment (reverse). Self-dimer: heuristic scan for complementary 4-mers, threshold −9 kcal/mol. Gibson Assembly is a method developed by Daniel G. Gibson. NEBuilder HiFi is a trademark of New England Biolabs, Inc. This tool is independent and not affiliated with NEB.

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Validated

Last validated 2026-04-07. Calculations are designed for planning and documentation support; verify procurement decisions against manufacturer specifications or institutional SOPs.

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How to cite

How to Cite

ConductScience Gibson Assembly Primer Designer (v1.18.0). ConductScience, Inc. 2026. Available at: https://conductscience.com/tools/gibson-assembly-primer-designer

Gibson DG et al. Enzymatic assembly of DNA molecules up to several hundred kilobases. Nature Methods. 2009;6:343–345. doi:10.1038/nmeth.1318

SantaLucia J Jr. A unified view of polymer, dumbbell, and oligonucleotide DNA nearest-neighbor thermodynamics. PNAS. 1998;95:1460–1465. doi:10.1073/pnas.95.4.1460

How Gibson Assembly works

Gibson Assembly (Gibson et al., 2009) joins multiple DNA fragments in a single-tube isothermal reaction at 50 °C. Three enzyme activities work in concert:

1. T5 exonuclease chews back 5′ ends, exposing complementary 3′ overhangs 2. Phusion polymerase fills gaps 3. Taq ligase seals nicks

The overlapping ends of adjacent fragments anneal and are seamlessly joined. The reaction typically completes in 15–60 minutes.

Primer design strategy

Each primer has two parts:

  • Binding region (3′ end): Anneals to the template for PCR. Length is optimized for Tm ~60 °C using nearest-neighbour thermodynamics.
  • Overlap extension (5′ end): Matches the adjacent fragment to create the overlap for assembly. Typically 15–40 bp.

For a forward primer, the overlap comes from the 3′ end of the upstream fragment. For a reverse primer, the overlap is the reverse complement of the 5′ end of the downstream fragment.

Nearest-neighbour Tm calculation

This tool uses the SantaLucia (1998) unified nearest-neighbour model:

Tm = ΔH / (ΔS + R × ln(Ct/4)) − 273.15

Where ΔH and ΔS are summed from all dinucleotide steps plus initiation parameters. Salt correction adjusts ΔS:

ΔS_adj = ΔS + 0.368 × (N−1) × ln[Na⁺]

Default conditions: [Na⁺] = 50 mM, [oligo] = 0.25 µM. Only the binding region Tm is reported (overlap extension does not anneal during PCR).

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