Team:USP-UNESP-Brazil/Plasmid Plug n Play/Results

From 2012.igem.org

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Based on the report made by the igem2010 UT-Tokyo team and some papers (e.g http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC137435/), the lox66 (BBa_I718016) from the registry was wrong, it had a gg instead a cg in its left arm. This part was corrected by the  iGEM11_Tokyo_Tech team (BBa_K649206) and by the iGEM11_WITS_CSIR_SA team (BBa_K537019), but no DNA was available in the registry. Anyway, we needed to synthesized it and test it as part of our PCR-primers, we used the proper sequence described  by http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC137435/.  
Based on the report made by the igem2010 UT-Tokyo team and some papers (e.g http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC137435/), the lox66 (BBa_I718016) from the registry was wrong, it had a gg instead a cg in its left arm. This part was corrected by the  iGEM11_Tokyo_Tech team (BBa_K649206) and by the iGEM11_WITS_CSIR_SA team (BBa_K537019), but no DNA was available in the registry. Anyway, we needed to synthesized it and test it as part of our PCR-primers, we used the proper sequence described  by http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC137435/.  
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We designed two primers, one containing the lox66 and one containing the loxP sequence, these primers amplified the ORF from the kanamycin resistance gene, flanked upstream by the loxP and downstream by the lox66, using PCR. These sites should be recognized by the Cre recombinase (from NEB company), which could circularized our linear PCR product. This is important because we don't want it to be degraded when inserted in the bacteria. This ''In vitro'' assay was a test for a posterior ''In vivo'' assay, where we expect that this process happens inside the ''E. coli'' using a Cre recombinase enzyme expressed by the same bacteria.     
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We designed two primers, one containing the lox66 and one containing the loxP sequences, these primers amplified the ORF from the kanamycin resistance gene, flanked upstream by the loxP and downstream by the lox66, using PCR. These sites should be recognized by the Cre recombinase (from NEB company), which could circularized our linear PCR product. This is important because we don't want it to be degraded when inserted in the bacteria. This ''In vitro'' assay was a test for a posterior ''In vivo'' assay, where we expect that this process happens inside the ''E. coli'' using a Cre recombinase enzyme expressed by the same bacteria.     
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Our experiment showed that 5U and 10U of Cre recombinase produced a reduction of linear DNA (Kanamycin resistance gene flanked with loxP and lox66) when compare to 1U of Cre recombinase and to the control DNA (No Cre recombinase added), as is showed in the figure A. It was also observed an increase of the DNA plasmid form (upper band at 2kb), as is showed in figure B. We also used a control DNA substrate supplied in the NEB recombinase kit. The same amount of PCR-product was applied to each lane (250ng)  
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Our experiment showed that 5U and 10U of Cre recombinase produced a reduction of linear DNA (Kanamycin resistance gene flanked with loxP and lox66) when compare to 1U of Cre recombinase and to the control DNA (No Cre recombinase added), as is showed in the figure A. It was also observed an increase of the DNA plasmid form (upper band at 2kb), as is showed in figure B. We also used a control DNA substrate supplied in the NEB recombinase kit. The same amount of PCR-product was applied to each lane (250ng).
The conclusion was that we can use this loxP-lox66 mechanism in our design and we will need at least 5U of Cre recombinase for any ''in vitro'' experiment.  
The conclusion was that we can use this loxP-lox66 mechanism in our design and we will need at least 5U of Cre recombinase for any ''in vitro'' experiment.  
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<h1 id="''In vivo'' assay ">''In vivo'' assay </h1>
<h1 id="''In vivo'' assay ">''In vivo'' assay </h1>
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We proved that we can circularize a fragment of DNA (Kanamycin resistance gene) flanked by a loxP and a lox66 sites ''in vitro'', so we decided to test Plug&Play prototype,
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We proved that we can circularize a fragment of DNA (kanamycin resistance gene) flanked by a loxP and a lox66 sites ''in vitro'', so we decided to test one of the Plug&Play prototypes (T7-lox71-Cre-pSB4A5). This plasmid produces a low copy number and has a resistance gene to ampicillin. The Cre recombinase is under the control of the T7 promoter, the target gene (in this case the 

Revision as of 13:21, 26 September 2012