Difference between revisions of "Team:Potsdam/Protocols"

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DNA away from the agarose gel. For instructions on how to do this, visit the  
 
DNA away from the agarose gel. For instructions on how to do this, visit the  
 
Gel Purification  
 
Gel Purification  
page.<br></div><br> <br>
+
page.<br></div><br> <br><br>
 +
<hr size="10" noshade></hr>
 +
 
 +
<p style="font-size:15pt;"><sup>[1]
 +
http://www.addgene.org/protocols/gel-electrophoresis/</p>
  
 
  </div></div></div>
 
  </div></div></div>
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<br> <br>
 
<br> <br>
  
<b>1. What is it?</b>
+
<b>1. What is it?</b><br><br>
 
<div style="text-align: justify;">  
 
<div style="text-align: justify;">  
 
Transmission of genetic information into competent cells (or plants, algas, mushrooms) (the target organismn)
 
Transmission of genetic information into competent cells (or plants, algas, mushrooms) (the target organismn)
</div>
+
</div><br>
 
+
<b>2. Steps</b><br><br>
<b>2. What you need</b>
+
 
<div style="text-align: justify; margin-left:20px">  
 
<div style="text-align: justify; margin-left:20px">  
1.5 mL tube, pipette (50µL), pipette(1000µL), plate <br>
+
1. Prechil 1.5 ml tube on ice. <br>
Ice, SOC Medium, competent cells </div>
+
2. Thaw a tube competent <i>E. coli </i> cells on ice for 10 minutes. </div>
<b>3. Steps</b>
+
<div style="text-align: justify; margin-left:20px">
+
1. Prechil 1.5 ml tube on ice <br>
+
 
+
2. Thaw a tube competent E. coli cells on ice for 10 minutes. </div>
+
 
<div style="text-align: justify; margin-left:40px">  
 
<div style="text-align: justify; margin-left:40px">  
1.  Mix gently <br>
+
1.  Mix gently. <br>
2. Pipette 50 µl of the cells  into the 1.5ml tube
+
2. Pipette 50 µl of the cells  into the 1.5 ml tube. </div>
 
+
    (Temperatures over 0°C decrease the efficiency of the transformation!)</div>
+
 
<div style="text-align: justify; margin-left:20px">  
 
<div style="text-align: justify; margin-left:20px">  
 
 
3. Add 1-5 µl (containing 1 pg-100 ng of plasmid) DNA to the cell mixture. <br>
 
3. Add 1-5 µl (containing 1 pg-100 ng of plasmid) DNA to the cell mixture. <br>
 
 
(as soon as as the last bit of ice in the tube is disappeared!)<br>
 
(as soon as as the last bit of ice in the tube is disappeared!)<br>
 
 
4. Flick the tube 4-5 times to mix cells and DNA. 
 
4. Flick the tube 4-5 times to mix cells and DNA. 
 
 
(No vortexing!)<br>
 
(No vortexing!)<br>
 
 
5. Place the mixture on ice for 30 minutes.
 
5. Place the mixture on ice for 30 minutes.
 
 
(without mixing!) <br>
 
(without mixing!) <br>
 
(2-fold loss in transformation efficiency for every 10 minutes this step is shortened!) 
 
(2-fold loss in transformation efficiency for every 10 minutes this step is shortened!) 
 
<br>
 
<br>
 
6. Heat shock at exactly 42°C for exactly 30 seconds.  
 
6. Heat shock at exactly 42°C for exactly 30 seconds.  
 
 
(without mixing!)<br>
 
(without mixing!)<br>
 
(temperature and timing specific to transformation volume and vessel)<br>
 
(temperature and timing specific to transformation volume and vessel)<br>
 
 
7. Place on ice for 5 minutes. <br>
 
7. Place on ice for 5 minutes. <br>
  
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8. Pipette 950 µl of room temperature SOC into the mixture. <br>
 
8. Pipette 950 µl of room temperature SOC into the mixture. <br>
  
9. Place at 37°C for 60 minutes and shake vigorously (800 rpm in thermo mix block)<br>
+
9. Place at 37°C for 60 minutes and shake vigorously (800 rpm in thermo mix block).<br>
  
 
(2-fold loss in transformation efficiency for every 15 minutes this step is shortened)<br>
 
(2-fold loss in transformation efficiency for every 15 minutes this step is shortened)<br>
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10. Warm selection plates to 37°C<br>
+
10. Warm selection plates to 37 °C.<br>
 
+
(plates can be used warm or cold, wet or dry…efficiency is nearly the same… warm plates are easier to spread and allow most rapid colony formation.)<br>
+
  
 
11. Mix the cells thoroughly by flicking the tube and inverting. <br>
 
11. Mix the cells thoroughly by flicking the tube and inverting. <br>
  
12. Spread 200 µl onto a selection plate and incubate overnight at 37°C. <br>
+
12. Spread 200 µl onto a selection plate and incubate overnight at 37 °C. <br>
  
13.For low efficiency cloning reactions: spin down the whole transformation mixture and remove the nearly complete supernatant (approx. 900 µl). Resuspend cells in remaining liquid and plate completely. </div>
+
13.For low efficiency cloning reactions: spin down the whole transformation mixture and remove the nearly complete supernatant (approx. 900 µl). Resuspend cells in remaining liquid and plate completely. </div><br><br>
 
<hr size="10" noshade></hr>
 
<hr size="10" noshade></hr>
  

Revision as of 18:20, 31 October 2017

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Our research work

Research work


Finding a suitable topic was very challenging and time consuming. Initially we looked through projects of prior teams and a list of topic suggestion provided by iGEM.

A big influence was a new method for assembling genes in a manufacturing manner which was being developed by a research group on our university. Based on the quick and easy synthesis of proteins a first idea was the creation of enzymes that could convert blood groups. Also working with cyanobacteria was an option we considered.

After many seminars we established the idea of metabolic channeling using dCas9 as our main project. One of our advisors also worked with membrane-less organelles and suggested this approach for achieving metabolic channeling and therefor our secondary project with LLPS.

We thought about using either violacein or beta carotene as exemplary product for our increased production but finally decided for beta carotene. This brought many new challenges in the form of understanding the pathway and implementing it in E. coli.

Also, we very worried that an increased output would end up consuming too much precursor substrate and hinder growth of the transformed cells. Additionally, we found that team Edinburgh/Glasgow had problems with toxicity if the enzymes of the beta carotene pathway were in a specific order.

But all the planning was for nothing when we realized that some of the enzymes of the beta carotene pathway were localized in the membrane and therefore not suitable for our metabolic channeling approach.

After planning the design more precise we eventually arrived at our scaffold design of a low and a high-copy plasmid.

Protocols