Team:Frankfurt/New Yeast RFC
From 2012.igem.org
(→Yeast BioBrick Assembly - Gap repair cloning for iGEM) |
|||
Line 27: | Line 27: | ||
{|width="100%" align="center" | {|width="100%" align="center" | ||
[[Image:Vektor_2.png|460px|right|thumb|Example of BioBrick Assembly via gap repair cloning with YBA standard. First primers are assembled to the respective gene via PCR. The primer overlap to suffix or prefix is about 20 bp. Now the assembled genes have homologous overlaps to the respective promoters and terminators of about 40 bp length. In a yeast transformation the shuffle plasmid, a ligated terminator-promoter part and the assembled genes are put into the yeast cells. They put all parts together via homologous recombination to form the complete vector.]] | [[Image:Vektor_2.png|460px|right|thumb|Example of BioBrick Assembly via gap repair cloning with YBA standard. First primers are assembled to the respective gene via PCR. The primer overlap to suffix or prefix is about 20 bp. Now the assembled genes have homologous overlaps to the respective promoters and terminators of about 40 bp length. In a yeast transformation the shuffle plasmid, a ligated terminator-promoter part and the assembled genes are put into the yeast cells. They put all parts together via homologous recombination to form the complete vector.]] | ||
+ | [[Image:|300px|right|thumb|Variable assembly of terminator-promoter parts via gap repair cloning.]] | ||
The BioBrick cloning standards used in the Parts Registry and in the iGEM competition are based on restriction digest and ligation. One of the main advantages of the gap repair method is to avoid this. Moreover it leaves no scars between the assembled fragments like restriction digest and religation does. Another advantage of gap repair cloning is it´s heightened time effiency when a large amount of fragments shall be assembled. Furthermore the expensive use of restriction and ligation enzymes can be reduced significantly. For these reasons gap repair cloning promises to be a useful tool for future iGEM teams. The problem is that the common Biobrick standards are useless by now with regard to gap repair cloning. The idea of YBA is now to design a new standard for assembly of yeast vectors based on standardized PCR primers. YBA is compartible to common BioBrick standards and allows gap repair cloning. | The BioBrick cloning standards used in the Parts Registry and in the iGEM competition are based on restriction digest and ligation. One of the main advantages of the gap repair method is to avoid this. Moreover it leaves no scars between the assembled fragments like restriction digest and religation does. Another advantage of gap repair cloning is it´s heightened time effiency when a large amount of fragments shall be assembled. Furthermore the expensive use of restriction and ligation enzymes can be reduced significantly. For these reasons gap repair cloning promises to be a useful tool for future iGEM teams. The problem is that the common Biobrick standards are useless by now with regard to gap repair cloning. The idea of YBA is now to design a new standard for assembly of yeast vectors based on standardized PCR primers. YBA is compartible to common BioBrick standards and allows gap repair cloning. | ||
<br><br> | <br><br> |
Revision as of 21:01, 26 September 2012
Contents |
The benefit of vector assembly in yeast
Introduction
iGEM Team Frankfurt 2012 successfully used a relatively new methode for vector assembly in yeast called Gap Repair Cloning. It is a more and more established methode for efficient, fast and error-free construction of plasmids based on the homologous recombination system of Saccharomyces cerevisiae (common yeast). Naturally yeast uses this process to repair DNA double strand breaks which are one of the most dangerous and life-threatening damages of the DNA for a cell. Therefor this eucaryotic microorganism has developed a few enzymes which have the ability to repair a broken DNA double strand by pairing it with a very similiar DNA region (typically on the homologous chromosome).
Using gap repair cloning a series of linear, successive DNA fragments with homologous overlaps to the respectively following fragment can be transformed in only one step into a yeast cell. After that the micoorganism recombines all fragments in the predetermined, specific order to the final targeting vector. The advantage is that up to eighteen and more successive DNA fragments can be assembled in a single transformation. Also only one restriction enzyme for linearization of the plasmid is needed.
For these reasons iGEM Team Frankfurt thought that gap repair cloning is usefull tool for next iGEM generations. Therefore we developed a standardized methode that describes a new way of assembling BioBrick devices in a desired order to a targeting plasmid using homologue recombination system of yeast. It is called Yeast BioBrick Assembly (YBA). YBA standard only needs one restriction enzyme and a standardized selection of primers and promotors/termintors. It is a continuation of the BioBrick standard and compartible with all BBF RFC 10 parts. Additionally it can be adapted by specific primer design to all other BioBrick standards. In the following we focuse on assembly of yeast expression vectors by using YBA methode. However it also can be used for E.coli vector design or assembly.
Homologue Recombination System of Yeast
There are many endogenous and exogenous factors (for example reactive oxygen-species, ionizing radiation, chemicals and failing of DNA binding enzymes (e.g. collapsed replication forks)) which causes DNA double strand breaks. For the cell this is the most dangerous DNA damage because even if it occurs in rather unimportant regions the cell will not survive the next cell cycle. That's the reason why yeast possesses highly active enzymes which have the ability to repair a broken double strand by pairing it with a very similiar DNA region (typically on the homologous chromosome). This process is called homologous recombination. Using the gap repair method this natural process can be exploited for the construction of large cloning vectors in yeast.
Design of DNA fragments for gap repair cloning
The idea of the method is to transform a series of linear, successive DNA fragments into one yeast cell. The linear fragments have open blunt ends like they occur after a double strand break. If a homologous sequence is available it will be treated like a genomic double strand break and homologous recombination takes place. When the successive DNA fragments are designed in a specific way which includes large sequence overlaps (overall app. 40 bp) to the respectively following fragment yeast will recombinate them together.For the formation of a cloning vector the first fragment is a yeast-E.coli shuttle plasmid which is linearized by an appropriate restriction digest. A shuttle plasmid is a plasmid which is stable both in yeast and in Escherichia coli. The first fragment of the insert has to possess an homologous overlap to both the wished insertion site on the plasmid and to the beginning of the second fragment. The end of the second fragment has to possess an overlap to the beginning of the third one and so on. At least the end of the last fragment of the insert again has to possess an overlap homologous to the second insertion site on the plasmid.
At the lab of our instructor up to eighteen single fragments were assembled in a single transformation. Another advantage of the method is that no scars are left between the inserted fragments. Assembly of fragments to joint genes is possible. Restriction enzymes only have to be used once for linearization of the shuttle plasmid.