Team:TU-Eindhoven/Notebook/Week10

From 2012.igem.org

(Difference between revisions)
Line 12: Line 12:
Since we need extra GECO protein for testing, we precultured some E. coli BL21 carrying the GECOs on the pET28a production vector. The precultures are transferred to 100 ml production volumes and induced with IPTG. Because the cooling of the incubator had not been switched on, the temperature was higher than we wanted. It seemed that no protein had been produced in the Erlenmeyer flasks, so we discarded them in the appropriate waste box, waiting for sterilization. A couple of hours later, we discovered that our Erlenmeyer flasks had turned red and green. Therefore we decided to test their fluorescence anyway. Both the R- and the G-GECO are strongly fluorescent in the blue light. We would like to know why the culture was fluorescent after taking it out of the incubator and letting it stand at room temperature for a few hours! Our first guess is that the bacteria have sedimented, started dying of a lack of oxygen at the bottom of the flask and thus releasing their cell contents into the medium. When the released GECOs came into contact with any calcium present in the medium, they got activated. Furthermore, the cell bodies have all sedimented and the medium turned from turbid to clear, allowing fluorescent light to shine colorfully instead of scatter into a blurry white.
Since we need extra GECO protein for testing, we precultured some E. coli BL21 carrying the GECOs on the pET28a production vector. The precultures are transferred to 100 ml production volumes and induced with IPTG. Because the cooling of the incubator had not been switched on, the temperature was higher than we wanted. It seemed that no protein had been produced in the Erlenmeyer flasks, so we discarded them in the appropriate waste box, waiting for sterilization. A couple of hours later, we discovered that our Erlenmeyer flasks had turned red and green. Therefore we decided to test their fluorescence anyway. Both the R- and the G-GECO are strongly fluorescent in the blue light. We would like to know why the culture was fluorescent after taking it out of the incubator and letting it stand at room temperature for a few hours! Our first guess is that the bacteria have sedimented, started dying of a lack of oxygen at the bottom of the flask and thus releasing their cell contents into the medium. When the released GECOs came into contact with any calcium present in the medium, they got activated. Furthermore, the cell bodies have all sedimented and the medium turned from turbid to clear, allowing fluorescent light to shine colorfully instead of scatter into a blurry white.
-
We continued working on the BioBricks. The colonies that seem to carry the BioBrick plasmid are amplified, isolated by miniprep and submitted for sequencing.
+
We continued working on the BioBricks<sup>TM</sup>. The colonies that seem to carry the BioBrick<sup>TM</sup> plasmid are amplified, isolated by miniprep and submitted for sequencing.

Revision as of 01:30, 27 September 2012