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

From 2012.igem.org

(Difference between revisions)
Line 21: Line 21:
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 gene that confers resistance to ampicillin. The Cre recombinase is under the control of the T7 promoter, the target gene (in this case the kanamycin resistance gene) will be inserted in the lox71 site upstream the Cre recombinase gene. When the gene is inserted it will be controlled by the same T7 promoter. This plasmid is one of the six prototypes we are developing, the comparison of these plasmids will identify the best system for the developing of this technology.  
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 gene that confers resistance to ampicillin. The Cre recombinase is under the control of the T7 promoter, the target gene (in this case the kanamycin resistance gene) will be inserted in the lox71 site upstream the Cre recombinase gene. When the gene is inserted it will be controlled by the same T7 promoter. This plasmid is one of the six prototypes we are developing, the comparison of these plasmids will identify the best system for the developing of this technology.  
-
For this experiment we needed a bacteria lineage transformed with the Plug&Play prototype. So we transformed electrocompetent ''E. coli''(Bl21(DE3)) cells with 1ul(80 ng) of the Plug&Play prototype. Then, we prepared electrocompetent cells using this transformed bacteria, producing a Plug&Play Machine ready to receive the kanamycin resistance gene.  
+
For this experiment we needed a bacteria lineage with the Plug&Play prototype plasmid. So we transformed electrocompetent ''E. coli''(Bl21(DE3)) cells with 1 uL(80 ng) of the Plug&Play prototype. Then, we prepared electrocompetent cells using this transformed bacteria, producing a Plug&Play Machine ready to receive the kanamycin resistance gene.  
-
We transformed the electrocompetent Plug&Play Machine cells with a gradient of our purified PCR-product (kanamycin resistance gene flanked by a loxP and a lox66): 10 ng, 100 ng and 1000 ng. This concentration were chosen using the mathematical model that the group already had. After transformation, the cells (50 ul) were left for 40 min in 1mL LB medium without antibiotic for recovering from the transformation stress.  
+
We transformed the electrocompetent Plug&Play Machine cells with a gradient of our purified PCR-product (kanamycin resistance gene flanked by a loxP and a lox66): 10 ng, 100 ng and 1000 ng. This concentration were chosen using the mathematical model that the group already had. After transformation, the cells (50 ul) were left for 40 min in 1 mL LB medium without antibiotic, for recovering from the transformation stress.  
-
The LB medium (1mL) were the bacteria were recovering was equally divided in three LB solid plates. One plate had ampicillin (100 ug/mL) and IPTG (1 mM), the second had kanamycin (50 ug/mL) and IPTG (1 mM) and the last one had ampicillin (100 ug/mL), kanamycin(50 ug/mL) and IPTG (1mM). The plates were left in incubation for 15 h at 37°C. As a control, the pET15b(25 ng) commercial plasmid was used for a independent transformation of the ''E. coli''(Bl21(DE3)) lineage and plated in the same three kind of plates. The pET15b plasmid has a gene that confers resistance to ampicillin.   
+
The LB medium (1 mL) were the bacteria were recovering was equally divided in three LB solid plates. One plate had ampicillin (100 ug/mL) and IPTG (1 mM), the second had kanamycin (50 ug/mL) and IPTG (1 mM) and the last one had both antibiotics (ampicillin (100 ug/mL) and kanamycin(50 ug/mL)) and IPTG (1 mM). The plates were left in incubation for 15 h at 37°C. As a control, the pET15b(25 ng) commercial plasmid was used for a independent transformation of the ''E. coli''(Bl21(DE3)) lineage and plated in the same three kind of plates. The pET15b plasmid has a gene that confers resistance to ampicillin.   
-
We found  
+
Our control worked as expected, the bacteria grew in the ampicillin plate but no in the kanamycin plate nor the plate with both antibiotics (Fig. 1). For the bacteria transformed with 10 ng of PCR-product, we found growth just in the ampicillin plate, which means that the bacteria had the Plug&Play plasmid, but no recombination had happened (Fig. 2).
 +
For the bacteria transformed with 100 ng and 1000 ng PCR-products we found colonies in the three plates. Finding colonies in the plate with both antibiotics means that the bacteria had a Plug&Play plasmid that recombinated 
-
{{:Team:USP-UNESP-Brazil/Templates/RImage | image=pett.jpg | caption= Fig. 1. LB plates used for the growth of bacteria transformed with pET15b. The antibiotic use in the plates are Ampicillin, kanamycin and ampicillin plus kanamycin, respectively  | size=500px }}
 
 +
{{:Team:USP-UNESP-Brazil/Templates/RImage | image=pett.jpg | caption= Fig. 1. LB plates used for the growth of bacteria transformed with pET15b. The antibiotic use in these plates are: ampicillin, kanamycin and ampicillin plus kanamycin, respectively (up to bottom). | size=500px }}
-
{{:Team:USP-UNESP-Brazil/Templates/RImage | image=10A.jpg | caption= Fig. 2. LB plates used for the growth of Plug&Play Machine cells transformed with 10 ng of PCR purified product. The antibiotic use in the plates are Ampicillin, kanamycin and ampicillin plus kanamycin, respectively | size=500px }}
+
 
 +
{{:Team:USP-UNESP-Brazil/Templates/RImage | image=10A.jpg | caption= Fig. 2. LB plates used for the growth of Plug&Play Machine cells transformed with 10 ng of PCR purified product. The antibiotic use in these plates are: ampicillin, kanamycin and ampicillin plus kanamycin, respectively (up to bottom). | size=500px }}

Revision as of 01:54, 27 September 2012