Difference between revisions of "Team:TMMU-China/Notebook"

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   <p><b>March</b>:After a couple of months of learning and training, 14 team members were gathered to establish the TMMU-China team. Team registration was completed. And we set our project .</p>
 
   <p><b>March</b>:After a couple of months of learning and training, 14 team members were gathered to establish the TMMU-China team. Team registration was completed. And we set our project .</p>
 
   <p><b>April</b>:We attended iGEM Southwest Union and had an overall assessment of the safety and feasibility of our project.</p>
 
   <p><b>April</b>:We attended iGEM Southwest Union and had an overall assessment of the safety and feasibility of our project.</p>
   <p><b>June</b>:The B. subtilis and <i>L. lactis</i> strain was constructed and the utility of it was tested.</p>
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   <p><b>June</b>:The <i>B. subtilis</i> and <i>L. lactis</i> strain was constructed and the utility of it was tested.</p>
 
   <p><b>July</b>:We completed the optimizations of the system, and constructed the plasmid containing the transcription factor AimR and PlcR, signal peptide gene AimP and PapR. Some of the members set out to design and finish the mathematic modeling.</p>
 
   <p><b>July</b>:We completed the optimizations of the system, and constructed the plasmid containing the transcription factor AimR and PlcR, signal peptide gene AimP and PapR. Some of the members set out to design and finish the mathematic modeling.</p>
 
   <p><b>August</b>:We attended the 2017 CCiC(Central China iGEM Consortium) held in Fujian Agriculture and Forestry University, receiving advice from Igem headquarter King L. CHOW and former iGEMer Zhang Haoqian.  And together with SCU-WestChina , we cooperated in helding the exhibition in Chengdu Public Library, publicizing “GMO & Human Health”.</p>
 
   <p><b>August</b>:We attended the 2017 CCiC(Central China iGEM Consortium) held in Fujian Agriculture and Forestry University, receiving advice from Igem headquarter King L. CHOW and former iGEMer Zhang Haoqian.  And together with SCU-WestChina , we cooperated in helding the exhibition in Chengdu Public Library, publicizing “GMO & Human Health”.</p>
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<h4 style="color: #00a98f;">1. Bacteria and culture media</h4>
 
<h4 style="color: #00a98f;">1. Bacteria and culture media</h4>
 
             <p>Bacteria strains used in this study are NZ9000 (<i>L. lactis</i>) and DH5α (<i>E. coli</i>). DH5α was used as the cloning host. <i>E. coli</i> were cultured in Luria-Bertani (LB) medium (agar or broth) at 37 °C. <i>L. lactis</i> was cultured in M17GS (M17 broth supplemented with 0.5 % (wt/vol) glucose, 0.55 % (wt/vol) sucrose) medium at 30 °C (agar or broth). Kanamycin was used at the concentration of 50 μg/mL for <i>E. coli</i>. Erythromycin was used at the concentration of 20 μg/mL for <i>L. lactis</i>. </p></br></br></br>  
 
             <p>Bacteria strains used in this study are NZ9000 (<i>L. lactis</i>) and DH5α (<i>E. coli</i>). DH5α was used as the cloning host. <i>E. coli</i> were cultured in Luria-Bertani (LB) medium (agar or broth) at 37 °C. <i>L. lactis</i> was cultured in M17GS (M17 broth supplemented with 0.5 % (wt/vol) glucose, 0.55 % (wt/vol) sucrose) medium at 30 °C (agar or broth). Kanamycin was used at the concentration of 50 μg/mL for <i>E. coli</i>. Erythromycin was used at the concentration of 20 μg/mL for <i>L. lactis</i>. </p></br></br></br>  
<h4 style="color: #00a98f;">2.Preparation for competent B. subtilis cells</h4>
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<h4 style="color: #00a98f;">2.Preparation for competent <i>B. subtilis</i> cells</h4>
 
<p>Streak out the strain to be made competent on an LB or TBAB agar plate as a large patch and incubate overnight at 30 ℃. The following morning scrape off the cell growth off the plate and use to inoculate fresh, pre-warmed, SpC medium to give an OD600 reading of about 0.5. Incubate the culture at about 37℃ with vigorous aeration and take periodic OD readings to assess cell growth. When the rate of cell growth is seen to depart from exponential inoculate 200ml of pre-warmed, SpⅡmedium with 2ml of stationary-phase culture and continue incubation at 37℃ with slower aeration. After 90min incubation, pellet the cells by centrifugation at room temperature. Carefully decant the supernatant into a sterile container and save. Gently resuspend the cell pellet in 18ml of saved supernatant and add 2ml of sterile glycerol; mix gently. Aliquot the competent cells in sterile tubes, freeze rapidly in liquid nitrogen or a dry-ice bath and store at -70℃.</p></br></br></br>  
 
<p>Streak out the strain to be made competent on an LB or TBAB agar plate as a large patch and incubate overnight at 30 ℃. The following morning scrape off the cell growth off the plate and use to inoculate fresh, pre-warmed, SpC medium to give an OD600 reading of about 0.5. Incubate the culture at about 37℃ with vigorous aeration and take periodic OD readings to assess cell growth. When the rate of cell growth is seen to depart from exponential inoculate 200ml of pre-warmed, SpⅡmedium with 2ml of stationary-phase culture and continue incubation at 37℃ with slower aeration. After 90min incubation, pellet the cells by centrifugation at room temperature. Carefully decant the supernatant into a sterile container and save. Gently resuspend the cell pellet in 18ml of saved supernatant and add 2ml of sterile glycerol; mix gently. Aliquot the competent cells in sterile tubes, freeze rapidly in liquid nitrogen or a dry-ice bath and store at -70℃.</p></br></br></br>  
 
<h4 style="color: #00a98f;">3. Polymerase Chain Reaction</h4>
 
<h4 style="color: #00a98f;">3. Polymerase Chain Reaction</h4>
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             <p>Example Protocol: Standard heat-shock transformation of chemically competent bacteria.</p>
 
             <p>Example Protocol: Standard heat-shock transformation of chemically competent bacteria.</p>
 
             <p>Take competent cells out of -80°C and thaw on ice (approximately 20-30min). Take agar plates (containing the appropriate antibiotic) out of 4°C to warm up to room temperature or place in 37°C incubator. Mix 1 to 5μl of DNA (usually 10pg to 100ng) into 20-50μL of competent cells in a microcentrifuge or falcon tube. GENTLY mix by flicking the bottom of the tube with your finger a few times. Note: Transformation efficiencies will be approximately 10-fold lower for ligation of inserts to vectors than for an intact control plasmid. Place the competent cell/DNA mixture on ice for 20-30min. Heat shock each transformation tube by placing the bottom 1/2 to 2/3 of the tube into a 42°C water bath for 30-60 seconds (45sec is usually ideal, but this varies depending on the competent cells you are using). Put the tubes back on ice for 2 min. Add 250-500μl LB or SOC media (without antibiotic) and grow in 37°C shaking incubator for 45min. Note: This outgrowth step allows the bacteria time to generate the antibiotic resistance proteins encoded on the plasmid backbone so that they will be able to grow once plated on the antibiotic containing agar plate. This step is not critical for Ampicillin resistance but is much more important for other antibiotic resistances. Plate some or all of the transformation onto a 10cm LB agar plate containing the appropriate antibiotic. Note: We recommend that you plate 50μL on one plate and the rest on a second plate. This gives the best chance of getting single colonies, while allowing you to recover all transformants. Incubate plates at 37°C overnight.</p></br></br></br>  
 
             <p>Take competent cells out of -80°C and thaw on ice (approximately 20-30min). Take agar plates (containing the appropriate antibiotic) out of 4°C to warm up to room temperature or place in 37°C incubator. Mix 1 to 5μl of DNA (usually 10pg to 100ng) into 20-50μL of competent cells in a microcentrifuge or falcon tube. GENTLY mix by flicking the bottom of the tube with your finger a few times. Note: Transformation efficiencies will be approximately 10-fold lower for ligation of inserts to vectors than for an intact control plasmid. Place the competent cell/DNA mixture on ice for 20-30min. Heat shock each transformation tube by placing the bottom 1/2 to 2/3 of the tube into a 42°C water bath for 30-60 seconds (45sec is usually ideal, but this varies depending on the competent cells you are using). Put the tubes back on ice for 2 min. Add 250-500μl LB or SOC media (without antibiotic) and grow in 37°C shaking incubator for 45min. Note: This outgrowth step allows the bacteria time to generate the antibiotic resistance proteins encoded on the plasmid backbone so that they will be able to grow once plated on the antibiotic containing agar plate. This step is not critical for Ampicillin resistance but is much more important for other antibiotic resistances. Plate some or all of the transformation onto a 10cm LB agar plate containing the appropriate antibiotic. Note: We recommend that you plate 50μL on one plate and the rest on a second plate. This gives the best chance of getting single colonies, while allowing you to recover all transformants. Incubate plates at 37°C overnight.</p></br></br></br>  
             <h4 style="color: #00a98f;">8.Transformation of B. subtilis</h4>
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             <h4 style="color: #00a98f;">8.Transformation of <i>B. subtilis</i></h4>
 
             <p>Thaw competent cells rapidly by immersing frozen tubes in a 37 ℃ water bath. Immediately, add one volume of SpⅡEGTA to the thawed cells; mix gently. In a sterile test tube add competent cells to the DNA solution and incubate in a roller drum at 37℃. Dilute the transformed cells as appropriate in T Base containing 0.5% glucose and plate immediately onto selective media.</p></br></br></br>  
 
             <p>Thaw competent cells rapidly by immersing frozen tubes in a 37 ℃ water bath. Immediately, add one volume of SpⅡEGTA to the thawed cells; mix gently. In a sterile test tube add competent cells to the DNA solution and incubate in a roller drum at 37℃. Dilute the transformed cells as appropriate in T Base containing 0.5% glucose and plate immediately onto selective media.</p></br></br></br>  
 
             <h4 style="color: #00a98f;">9. Transformation of <i>Lactococcus lactis</i></h4>
 
             <h4 style="color: #00a98f;">9. Transformation of <i>Lactococcus lactis</i></h4>

Revision as of 04:59, 1 November 2017

Contact us
Email: igem@tmmu.edu.cn
Address:Third Military Medical University,
No.30 Gaotanyan Street Shapingba District,
Chongqing, P.R.China 400038