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Note: Contamination in theory must not a priori lead to end of current evolutionary process as contamination phages should not be able to propagate on your AP-carrying host cells if it lacks geneIII. Nevertheless, don't go on with PREDCEL when contaminated in order to gather valid data, especially regarding your phage titers. This counts even more if your AP-design might allow other non-wild-type phages to propagate. | Note: Contamination in theory must not a priori lead to end of current evolutionary process as contamination phages should not be able to propagate on your AP-carrying host cells if it lacks geneIII. Nevertheless, don't go on with PREDCEL when contaminated in order to gather valid data, especially regarding your phage titers. This counts even more if your AP-design might allow other non-wild-type phages to propagate. | ||
− | + | }} | |
+ | }} | ||
+ | {{Heidelberg/templateus/Contentsection| | ||
{{#tag:html| | {{#tag:html| | ||
<h1>Cloning Standard</h1> | <h1>Cloning Standard</h1> | ||
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resistance (4-5), a bicistronic operon with geneIII (2-3)and the desired reporter (3-4), which can be | resistance (4-5), a bicistronic operon with geneIII (2-3)and the desired reporter (3-4), which can be | ||
activated by any promoter (1-2)and a second expression cassette for additional genes that are necessary | activated by any promoter (1-2)and a second expression cassette for additional genes that are necessary | ||
− | for the respective circuit (1-5).| | + | for the respective circuit (1-5).|}} |
In the following section, our cloning strategy is described in detail. | In the following section, our cloning strategy is described in detail. | ||
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</tbody> | </tbody> | ||
</table> | </table> | ||
− | + | }}|}} | |
<b>1. Promoter and Activation Region</b> | <b>1. Promoter and Activation Region</b> | ||
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<b>2. GeneIII</b> | <b>2. GeneIII</b> | ||
− | GeneIII is the main component of the second subpart. As already decribed above, it is crucial to keep the amount of produced proteinIII in a range where it is proportional to phage production. Beside the copy number of the plasmid Its translation is regulated by a specific RBSs. The RBS and the coding sequence of geneIII are flanked by HR2 and HR3. It is important, that there is no terminator downstream of the gen, only a stop codon, because the reporter should be located on the same mRNA in a bicistronic manner. To make cloning as simple as possible, we submitted geneIII in combination with five different RBS'. The used ribosomal binding sites were published by Ringquist et al. 1992 <x-ref>RN140</-ref>. These RBS span a range of two orders of magnitude and are therefore perfectly suited for tight regulation of geneIII expression. | + | GeneIII is the main component of the second subpart. As already decribed above, it is crucial to keep the amount of produced proteinIII in a range where it is proportional to phage production. Beside the copy number of the plasmid Its translation is regulated by a specific RBSs. The RBS and the coding sequence of geneIII are flanked by HR2 and HR3. It is important, that there is no terminator downstream of the gen, only a stop codon, because the reporter should be located on the same mRNA in a bicistronic manner. To make cloning as simple as possible, we submitted geneIII in combination with five different RBS'. The used ribosomal binding sites were published by Ringquist et al. 1992 <x-ref>RN140</x-ref>. These RBS span a range of two orders of magnitude and are therefore perfectly suited for tight regulation of geneIII expression. |
{{Heidelberg/templateus/Tablebox| | {{Heidelberg/templateus/Tablebox| | ||
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</tbody> | </tbody> | ||
</table> | </table> | ||
− | + | }}|}} | |
<b>3. Reporter</b> | <b>3. Reporter</b> | ||
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<h2>Cloning of APs</h2> | <h2>Cloning of APs</h2> | ||
− | |||
Our plasmids can easily be assembled via Gibson assembly. In summary, Gibson Aassembly makes use of an exonuclease, which cuts back the 5'-ends of the fragments. Subsequently, the overhangs anneal, gaps are filled up by the phusion polymerase (Thermo Fisher Scientific) and ligated by a taq-ligase. | Our plasmids can easily be assembled via Gibson assembly. In summary, Gibson Aassembly makes use of an exonuclease, which cuts back the 5'-ends of the fragments. Subsequently, the overhangs anneal, gaps are filled up by the phusion polymerase (Thermo Fisher Scientific) and ligated by a taq-ligase. | ||
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− | Assembly of APs from Registry Parts | + | <h2>Assembly of APs from Registry Parts</h2> |
− | + | ||
Many of the parts we tested in our experiments are available from the registry. Among them most of the standard units, which can be used in any in vivo evolution experiment, like geneIII, different backbones and some reporters. Furthermore, we provide parts, which are necessary for the circuits, we designed during iGEM. Obviously, all these sequences are offered as BioBrick parts in pSB1C3. Accordingly, we made our cloning method compatible with RFC10, the BioBrick standard (Fig.: X). All subparts can be cloned into pSB1C3. They only have to be flanked by the respective homology regions and a BglII site, wherat the first or last base of the recognition site is included in the homology region. This is a key criteria, because it facilitates for fast and easy cloning. | Many of the parts we tested in our experiments are available from the registry. Among them most of the standard units, which can be used in any in vivo evolution experiment, like geneIII, different backbones and some reporters. Furthermore, we provide parts, which are necessary for the circuits, we designed during iGEM. Obviously, all these sequences are offered as BioBrick parts in pSB1C3. Accordingly, we made our cloning method compatible with RFC10, the BioBrick standard (Fig.: X). All subparts can be cloned into pSB1C3. They only have to be flanked by the respective homology regions and a BglII site, wherat the first or last base of the recognition site is included in the homology region. This is a key criteria, because it facilitates for fast and easy cloning. | ||
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If one wants to use such parts for plasmid assembly, they can be cut with BglII. The appropriate band has to be gelexed and can subsequently used for Gibson assembly. BglII creates 5'-overhangs, which are eliminated by the 5'-exonuclease that is used for Gibson assembly. Only 1 bp, a thymine at the 5'-end or an adenine at the 3'-end, remains. Is this base pair is included in the homology region, it does not interfere with Gibson Assembly. As a result, our standard is fully compatible with RFC10 and our parts from the registry can be included without problems. | If one wants to use such parts for plasmid assembly, they can be cut with BglII. The appropriate band has to be gelexed and can subsequently used for Gibson assembly. BglII creates 5'-overhangs, which are eliminated by the 5'-exonuclease that is used for Gibson assembly. Only 1 bp, a thymine at the 5'-end or an adenine at the 3'-end, remains. Is this base pair is included in the homology region, it does not interfere with Gibson Assembly. As a result, our standard is fully compatible with RFC10 and our parts from the registry can be included without problems. | ||
− | }}}} | + | }} |
+ | }} | ||
}} | }} |
Revision as of 15:03, 1 November 2017
PREDCEL
SIMPLIFY DIRECTED EVOLUTION
Introduction
General Information
Motivation
PREDCEL Procedure
As it is important to prevent phage contaminations at any time, all the following PREDCEL steps have to be performed with filter tips. Benches should be cleaned with 10% H202 (pay attention with handling) or another suitable solution for phage inactivation. If practicable, use UV light on benches and in incubators to sterilize after and before your experiments.After successfully transforming your AP and MP plasmids into your bacterial strain (see transformation protocols), make sure the used strain carries the F-Pilus plasmid as it is needed for proper M13 phage infection. Therefore, grow a bacterial culture from a picked single colony. This culture should be plated on a tetracycline (tet) plate, since the strain should carry a tetracycline resistance on its F-Pilus plasmid.
Step 2: Prove MP to work
Single colonies showing a positive result in
Step 3: Glycerol stocks
Based on a positive result in
Step 4: Contamination test
Before finally starting the PREDCEL run, the bacterial culture and thereby the glycerol stock should be tested for a phage contamination. Therefore, plaque assays with the supernatant of the culture should be implemented following the
Step 5: Centrifugation and MP activation
Starting your PREDCEL run, a new culture should be grown, using one of the 100 µl glycerol stock aliquots for inoculation. This culture should also reach an OD600 = 0.6-1.0 and has to be prepared early enough to minimize time between gain of phage supernatant and new infection round. If the culture reaches the respective OD600 too fast, dilute until you can infect with phages or cool on ice if it takes less than 10 minutes until infection. Centrifuge 10 ml or more of your culture for 10 min at 3750 g at room temperature to pellet your bacteria. Afterwards, resolve your cell pellet in a 150 ml flask with a volume of 2YT equal to the volume spun down containing 100 mM arabinose to induce MP.
Optional: Keep 1 ml of culture supernatant after centrifugation and 1ml of medium solution you dissolve with. Store both at 4°C. Additional to PCR they could later be used for contamination check by plaque assay.
Step 6: Phage infection
In the next step, infect the resuspension with a suitable number of phages. As titers of inoculation phage can vary a lot a multiplicity of infection (MOI) of 1 is recommended for PREDCEL, rather than giving a specific inoculation volume. MOI of 1 means that there is one phage per cell in solution. In contrast, while performing PREDCEL, define a certain phage supernatant volume you kept at 4°C to be transferred, for instance 1 ml, as phage titers cannot be determined fast enough by plaque assays to calculate the right MOI. Make sure you have at least 1 ml of phage supernatant left to analyze. Transfer the same number of phages used for infection into a phage buffer solution, especially if titer of inoculation phage is unknown.
Grow the infected cultures for 1 to 24 hours, respective to your propagation results during the AP testing, at optimal growth conditions (for
Step 7: Phage supernatant
After incubation time spin down at least 2 ml of cells at 6000 g for 3 min at room temperature to pellet your cells. Phages in the supernatant are now separated from the bacteria in the pellet. Store phage supernatant at 4°C. Discard pellets and the rest of the culture.
From now on repeat steps 5 to 7. After one round is completed you can pause the PREDCEL process and restart later with the stored supernatant.
While PREDCELing, test PCRs with specific products for your SP should be performed as well as test plaque assays should be implemented to detect and prevent phage washout or phage contamination in your used stocks, media and bacterial cell cultures.
If contamination or wash out is recognized, take the last sample proven to contain phages and which is free of contamination to start a new PREDCEL iteration round with a fresh culture.
Step 8: Plaque assay
Perform plaque assays of your PREDCEL samples including inoculation phage and culture samples from
Step 9: Sequencing
To check your evolutionary progress, at last eight plaques should be picked to use them for insert amplification via PCR. Afterwards, sequencing of your PCR product can be implemented with insert specific sequencing primers. Mention that mutations taking place while PREDCEL may lead to inefficient primer annealing.
Troubleshooting:
As phage propagation rate and mutation efficiency usually varies between different gene circuits and phages, but also due to the achieved changes in activity within one PREDCEL run, you might have to adopt several parameters to achieve a lower selection pressure (if phages get lost over time), a higher selection pressure (only random mutations occur) or changes in mutation rate (too little/many mutations). These parameters are:
- the amount of culture volume to be infected and the corresponding flask size
- the time of incubation after infection
- the amount of phage supernatant transferred
To check for the right parameters pre-experiments, need to be performed for an optimized propagation efficiency.
You should also prepare several strains of your bacteria carrying APs with different RBS-strengths and origins of replication and different MPs (MP1/4/6 vary in mutation rate).
If you have problems with phage propagation due to no or too little starting activity an initial drift phase without selection pressure might help in the beginning.
Another helpful adaption is the usage of a helper-culture. This culture should be used between every or several PREDCEL AP-iteration rounds and must provide geneIII expression that is only coupled to phage infection. Thereby all phages that are transferred can reproduce to gain a high phage titer that might be needed to prevent phage washout. As previously phages showing higher activity propagated faster than those showing no or low activity they will, as a consequence, achieve higher phage titers while this helper-culture-phase. Thus, helper-culture phase should not redeem previously achieved selection for beneficial mutations.
Note: Contamination in theory must not a priori lead to end of current evolutionary process as contamination phages should not be able to propagate on your AP-carrying host cells if it lacks geneIII. Nevertheless, don't go on with PREDCEL when contaminated in order to gather valid data, especially regarding your phage titers. This counts even more if your AP-design might allow other non-wild-type phages to propagate.
Cloning Standard
The crucial step of to the cloning of PACE circuits is the generation of the accessory plasmid. These plasmids allow geneIII expression dependent on the evolving protein. The link between the fitness of the protein of interest and the expression of geneIII determines the effectiveness of the directed evolution and the presence of ProteinIII is essential for the production of new phage particles. On the one hand, the initial expression of geneIII needs to be strong enough so that phages with the wildtype protein or negligible mutated protein are able to persist in the lagoon, and that they are not washed out. On the other hand, the expression of geneIII should neither be too high, because reproduction of the phage is only linked to it as long proteinIII is the limiting factor. Consequently, regulation of the geneIII expression influences the selection stringency of the directed evolution process.For these reasons, it is a major challenge of PACE, to provide the right amount of geneIII. The amount of geneIII that is provided, can easily be regulated by changing the RBS and/or the origin of replication. In addition it is in many cases necessary to use more than one AP to vary selection pressure. Therefore, one must find a quick and easy way to modify APs.
If more than one variant of a circuit should be tested at a time, it is necessary to modify the activation region for geneIII and the additional gene that can be located on the AP with a minimum of effort. This is the another reason for a efficient cloning strategy.
To make AP cloning as simple as possible, we defined a new cloning standard that is specifically suited for the assembly of Aps, we wrote a BBF RFC that describes our concept in detail.
We subdivided the accessory plasmid in five subparts with different functionalities: The promoter for transcription of geneIII with associated regulation sequences (1), geneIII itself with an appropriate RBS (2), a fluorescent or luminescent reporter (3), the plasmid backbone (4) and a second expression cassette for additional genes that are needed for the circuit.
Our aim was it to make it possible that these different fragments can easily be assembled and recombined, to minimize the cloning effort. Therefore we created five standard homology regions that seperate the different subparts and enable for fast and efficient Gibson assembly.
Homology Regions
We defined five different homology regions (HR) that obey the following criteria: The sequences have a length of 32 bp which is long enough for efficient Gibson assembly. They do not contain the ATG start codon. Furthermore the different sequences have low similarity. Last, they exhibit no secondary structures at 50 °C according to Mfold (http://unafold.rna.albany.edu/?q=mfold). A table with the respective sequences are shown in the table below. Furthermore every homology region starts with an thymine and ends with an adenine. This enables for the compatibility with RFC10 (see below).Table 1: Standard homology regions for the use for accessory plasmid construction
Homology Region | Sequence |
---|---|
HR1 | TACGTTTCGTTACAGAGCTCGCCAGTGGATAA |
HR2 | TATCAGATCATCGTCGACCTACAGGTGCAGTA |
HR3 | TGGTCGGTGCCTATCAACTCGAGTAGTACTAA |
HR4 | TTGTCTGGAGCCAAGCCGCATTTGAAGTACCA |
HR5 | TCAGTTCTCGTAATGCAGGGCCCAGAATTTCA |
It is necessary that the activation works robust and even the unevolved protein is able to activate transcription to some extend. At the same time the complete promoter subpart, including both homology regions, should not be shorter than 200 bp to ensure efficient Gibson assembly. 2. GeneIII GeneIII is the main component of the second subpart. As already decribed above, it is crucial to keep the amount of produced proteinIII in a range where it is proportional to phage production. Beside the copy number of the plasmid Its translation is regulated by a specific RBSs. The RBS and the coding sequence of geneIII are flanked by HR2 and HR3. It is important, that there is no terminator downstream of the gen, only a stop codon, because the reporter should be located on the same mRNA in a bicistronic manner. To make cloning as simple as possible, we submitted geneIII in combination with five different RBS'. The used ribosomal binding sites were published by Ringquist et al. 1992
Table 1: RBS’ used in combination with geneIII in the context of our project; The name of the RBS, the sequence, and the strength relative to SD8 are schown
Name | Sequence | Relative Strength |
---|---|---|
SD8 | AAGGAGGAAAAAAAAA | 1.00 |
SD4 | AAGGAGGAAAAA | 0.51 |
sd8 | AAAGGAAAAAAAAA | 0.20 |
sd6 | AAAAAGGAAAAAAA | 0.13 |
sd2 | AAAAAAAAAGGAAA | 0.01 |
Regarding the antibiotic resistance, ampicillin is the most probable variant. As large amounts of antibiotics are necessary for PACE, ampicillin is the modt attractive and commonly used alternative for APs. Nonetheless, different experiment setups may require different resistances, which is why we provide different resistance cassettes in the part, we provide on the registry. The backbone must be flanked by HR4 and HR5. 5. Expression of other Proteins The majority of circuits needs more proteins, than geneIII and the evolving protein. As a consequence, our cloning standard provides a space for a second expression cassette in addition to geneIII for other circuit related proteins. There are many cases, in which other proteins may be needed for the PACE experiment. This could be virtually any protein that is needed, for example chaperones for efficient folding of enzymes, proteins that interact with others, gRNA cassettes for CRISPR endonuclease evolution and many more. In this case, it is important to include the full expression cassette between HR1 and HR5, beginning with a promoter, which can be either constitutive or activatable, followed by a RBS and the coding sequence and finally finished by an appropriate terminator. If the termination is not perfect, the second expression cassette should be inserted in the opposite direction than the cassette of geneIII to avoid a secondary expression of geneIII.