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<p> | <p> | ||
We decided to compare three versions of Cas13a that were previously characterized in the literature<sup><a class="myLink" href="#ref_1">1</a></sup>: Lbu, Lsh, and Lwa. We ordered the Lbu and Lsh plasmids from Addgene, and we cloned Lwa using Golden Gate assembly (sequence was taken from Gootenberg et al., 2017). Lbu and Lsh were expressed in <i>E.coli</i> Rosetta2, as the sequences were not codon-optimized, and Lwa was expressed in <i>E.coli</i> BL21 (DE3) star. We created three BioBricks from the Lwa sequence: <a class="myLink" href="http://parts.igem.org/Part:BBa_K2323000">BBa_K2323000</a> (containing the Lwa coding sequence and a Tphi terminator), <a class="myLink" href="http://parts.igem.org/Part:BBa_K2323001">BBa_K2323001</a> (where a 6xHis/Twin strep tag and a SUMO tag are added to the N-terminal end of BBa_K2323000), and <a href="http://parts.igem.org/Part:BBa_K2323004">BBa_K2323004</a> (where BBa_K2323001 is preceded by the T7 promoter and the Elowitz RBS). We improved the TEV-protease <a class="myLink" href="http://parts.igem.org/Part:BBa_K1319008">BBa_K1319008</a> by tagging it with a 6xHis tag, purified it and successfully used it for the TEV cleavage of our Cas13a proteins. </p> | We decided to compare three versions of Cas13a that were previously characterized in the literature<sup><a class="myLink" href="#ref_1">1</a></sup>: Lbu, Lsh, and Lwa. We ordered the Lbu and Lsh plasmids from Addgene, and we cloned Lwa using Golden Gate assembly (sequence was taken from Gootenberg et al., 2017). Lbu and Lsh were expressed in <i>E.coli</i> Rosetta2, as the sequences were not codon-optimized, and Lwa was expressed in <i>E.coli</i> BL21 (DE3) star. We created three BioBricks from the Lwa sequence: <a class="myLink" href="http://parts.igem.org/Part:BBa_K2323000">BBa_K2323000</a> (containing the Lwa coding sequence and a Tphi terminator), <a class="myLink" href="http://parts.igem.org/Part:BBa_K2323001">BBa_K2323001</a> (where a 6xHis/Twin strep tag and a SUMO tag are added to the N-terminal end of BBa_K2323000), and <a href="http://parts.igem.org/Part:BBa_K2323004">BBa_K2323004</a> (where BBa_K2323001 is preceded by the T7 promoter and the Elowitz RBS). We improved the TEV-protease <a class="myLink" href="http://parts.igem.org/Part:BBa_K1319008">BBa_K1319008</a> by tagging it with a 6xHis tag, purified it and successfully used it for the TEV cleavage of our Cas13a proteins. </p> | ||
+ | <div class="captionPicture"> | ||
+ | <img width=440 src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2017/e/ee/T--Munich--Cas13a_Lbu_PAGE_graph.png"> | ||
+ | <p>Gel</p> | ||
+ | </div> | ||
<p> | <p> | ||
We followed the purification protocols from literature, and found that although the His-purification and the tag cleavage steps worked as expected, the cation-exchange purification step failed, and we systematically lost our proteins. We still completed the size-exclusion purification, and our proteins with some amount of contamination. Protein purification took most of the first month of our project, due to the failure of the cation-exchange chromatography, but we eventually purified functional, if not perfectly clean, proteins. | We followed the purification protocols from literature, and found that although the His-purification and the tag cleavage steps worked as expected, the cation-exchange purification step failed, and we systematically lost our proteins. We still completed the size-exclusion purification, and our proteins with some amount of contamination. Protein purification took most of the first month of our project, due to the failure of the cation-exchange chromatography, but we eventually purified functional, if not perfectly clean, proteins. | ||
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<h3>Discussion and conclusion</h3> | <h3>Discussion and conclusion</h3> | ||
<p> | <p> | ||
− | We purified and proved the functionality of the Cas13a enzyme, chose Lbu for its better activity, optimized the concentrations in our detection scheme and found the detection limit to be in the range of 10 nM target RNA. We found that we could detect RNA from <i>in vivo</i> sources, with full RNA extraction, but possibly also from simply lysed cells. This makes this module (the Cas13a detection circuit) the best characterized and most promising module of our platform. It gives fast, high fluorescence signals for low target RNA concentration | + | We purified and proved the functionality of the Cas13a enzyme, chose Lbu for its better activity, optimized the concentrations in our detection scheme and found the detection limit to be in the range of 10 nM target RNA. We found that we could detect RNA from <i>in vivo</i> sources, with full RNA extraction, but possibly also from simply lysed cells. This makes this module (the Cas13a detection circuit) the best characterized and most promising module of our platform. It gives fast, high fluorescence signals for low target RNA concentration, and can be combined with our amplification module, which would use heat lysis (80°C) followed by reverse transcription, RPA and transcription (room temperature).</p> |
</td> | </td> | ||
</tr> | </tr> |
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