Team:Imperial College London/Project Gene Testing

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<h1>Testing</h1>
<h1>Testing</h1>
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<h2>1. Anti-holin expression</h2>
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<p>Horizontal gene transfer is currently an increasingly pressing topic in the field of Synthetic Biology. It is the main limiting factor which is halting the release of GMO's to the environment as while we know what our genetic construct will do in our own chassis we are unsure what it will do in another organism. In order to prevent this issue of genetic containment we have designed a novel toxin/anti-toxin system, the Gene Guard.</p>
-
<p>Prior to the wiki freeze, we managed to complete stage 1 of the assembly of the Gene Guard. A protein gel showed a clear band of the appropriate size right at the bottom of the gel when compared to a control cell. Therefore, we have sequence verified and shown that the <a href="http://partsregistry.org/wiki/index.php?title=Part:BBa_K515104">BBa_K515104</a> expresses a protein of the appropriate size (Fig. 1).</p>
+
<p>In this module we wanted to first test the necessity of this system by performing experiments to see how long <i>E. coli</i> would retain the plasmid in soil as well as under optimal conditions. Then we tested whether the Gene Guard was assembled correctly at each stage. Finally, we wanted to perform an experiment where we transform control cells and our Gene Guard cells with the holin-endolysin plasmid. Is Gene Guard necessary? Moreover, does it work? Stay tuned to find out.</p>
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<h2>2. <i>Escherichia coli</i> survivability and plasmid retainment in soil<a href="https://2011.igem.org/Team:Imperial_College_London/Protocols_Switch"><img src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2011/5/58/ICL_ProtocolIconDark.png" width="140px" align="right"/></a></h2>
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<p style="font-size:1.3em;"><a href="#" onClick="ddaccordion.collapseall('technology'); return false">Collapse all</a>  | <a href="#" onClick="ddaccordion.expandall('technology'); return false">Expand all</a></p>
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<br>
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<div class="imgbox" style="width:520px;float:right;">
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<div class="technology">1. <i>E. coli</i> survivability in soil and plasmid retainment</div>
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<img class="border" src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2011/b/b6/Fluorescent_soil_plates.png" width="500" />
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<div class="thelanguage">
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<p><i>Figure 3. Colonies recovered from filter discs and grown on LB plates containing selective antibiotics imaged using a LAS-3000 gel imager. a) Sample taken from non-sterilised soil b) Sample taken from sterilised soil  (Data by Imperial College London iGEM 2011).</i></p>
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<h3>1.1 Survivability in soil<a href="a href="https://2011.igem.org/Team:Imperial_College_London/Protocols_Switch"><img src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2011/5/58/ICL_ProtocolIconDark.png" width="140px" align="right"/></a></h3>
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</div>.
+
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<p>To test for the necessity of Gene Guard when inoculating <i>E. coli</i> chassis into the soil, we set up a soil experiment. We initially transformed chemically competent DH5alpha cells with superfolder GFP. These cells were inoculated on small (about 0.5 cm diameter) filter discs, which were placed in autoclaved and non-autoclaved soil. We periodically grew up cultures from these filter discs over the course of six weeks.</p>
 
-
<p>After six weeks, we were able to recover fluorescent bacteria from sterilised soil. Colonies appearing to be <E. coli</i> on the plates from non-sterile soil had lost fluorescence (Fig. 2).
 
 +
<p>
 +
We set up a soil experiment to test how long our <i>E. coli</i> chassis can retain its plasmid in soil. We initially transformed chemically competent <i>E. coli</i> DH5α cells with superfolder GFP. These cells were inoculated on small filter discs (about 0.5 cm diameter), which were placed in autoclaved and non-autoclaved soil. We periodically grew up cultures from these filter discs over the course of seven weeks.</p>
 +
<p>After seven weeks, we were able to recover fluorescent bacteria from sterilised and non-autoclaved soil <b>(Figure 1)</b>.</p>
 +
<br>
-
<p>As is visible from these plates, fluorescence was present in bacteria recovered from both sterile but not from non-sterile soil. The control plate showed that there was no contamination with other fluorescent lab bacteria. In order to investigate whether the fluorescence observed was due to the presence of the original sfGFP construct and whether the <i>E. coli</i>-like colonies from the non-sterile sample had retained a plasmid we extracted plasmid DNA using a miniprep kit and did a digest with EcoRI and PstI and with EcoRI on its own to check for presence of the original insert and size of the unfolded vector, respectively (Fig. 3).</p>
+
<div class="imgbox" style="width:800px;float:none;margin:0 auto">
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<img class="border" src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2011/b/b6/Fluorescent_soil_plates.png" width="720" />
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<p><i>Figure 1: Colonies recovered from filter discs and grown on LB plates containing selective antibiotics imaged using a LAS-3000 gel imager. a) Sample taken from non-sterilised soil b) Sample taken from sterilised soil (Data by Imperial College London iGEM team 2011).</i></p>
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</div>
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 +
<br>
<div class="imgbox" style="width:270px;float:left">
<div class="imgbox" style="width:270px;float:left">
<img class="border" src="http://partsregistry.org/wiki/images/9/9c/Soil_digest_gel.png" width="250" />
<img class="border" src="http://partsregistry.org/wiki/images/9/9c/Soil_digest_gel.png" width="250" />
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<p><i>Figure 2. Gel digests of bacteria displaying colony morphology typical of <i>E. coli</i> recovered from non-sterilised and sterilised soil. These bacteria exhibited colony morphologies typical of </i>E. coli.<i> (Data by Imperial College iGEM 2011)</i></p>
+
<p><i>Figure 2: Gel digests of bacteria displaying colony morphology typical of </i>E. coli<i> recovered from non-sterilised and sterilised soil. These bacteria exhibited colony morphologies typical of </i>E. coli.<i> (Data by Imperial College iGEM team 2011).</i></p>
</div>
</div>
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<br>
 +
 +
<p>As is visible from these plates, fluorescence was present in bacteria recovered from both sterile and non-sterile soil. A control plate grown from a filter disc inoculated in non-sterilised soil without fluorescent bacteria showed that there was no contamination with other fluorescent lab bacteria. In order to investigate whether the fluorescence observed was due to the presence of the original sfGFP construct and whether the <i>E. coli</i>-like colonies from the non-sterile sample had retained a plasmid, we extracted plasmid DNA using a miniprep kit and did a digest with EcoRI and PstI and with EcoRI on its own to check for presence of the original insert and size of the unfolded vector, respectively <b>(Figure 2)</b>.</p>
 +
 +
 +
<p>The insert is very clearly visible at just below 2 kb. This confirms the presence of superfolder GFP in both cultures. Sequencing of the GFP insert revealed that no mutations had taken place in the superfolder GFP gene contained in the bacteria inoculated in non-sterile and sterile soil. This result was obtained in three separate replicates.<p>In addition, small colonies appeared on the non-sterile plate that had very different colony morphology. We grew this colony up in LB medium containing selective antibiotic and subsequently performed a separate miniprep. No DNA was yielded in this miniprep. It is therefore likely that the plasmid was not transferred to these bacteria but that they either possess natural antibiotic resistance or were able to survive on plates that whose antibiotics had already been depleted by the presence of resistant engineered bacteria.
 +
<p>A possible experiment could be using all three samples, the sample from the sterile plate, and the two from the non-sterile plate showing <i>E. coli</i>-like and non-<i>E. coli</i>-like morphologies for 16S ribosomal RNA sequencing (using commonly used primers<sup>[1]</sup>) to determine the bacterial species.
 +
<p>This result is extremely important as it shows that plasmids can be retained in <i>E. coli</i> for a very long period of time even in the presence of competition when inoculated in soil. This gives us an indication of the life-span our chassis would have in the soil in its implementation stage. In addition, long retainment of the plasmid means that the chance for horizontal gene transfer increases, rendering this result very important for the Gene Guard module.</p>
 +
<br>
 +
<br>
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<br>
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<br>
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<br>
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<div class="newouterbox">
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<h4 class="newtext">NEW SINCE EUROPE JAMBOREE</h4>
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<div class="newinnerbox">
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<h3>1.2 Plasmid retainment<a href="a href="https://2011.igem.org/Team:Imperial_College_London/Protocols_Switch"><img src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2011/5/58/ICL_ProtocolIconDark.png" width="140px" align="right"/></a></h3>
 +
<br>
 +
<p>After observing survivability and growth of <i>E. coli</i> in soil, we assumed that the plasmid containing sfGFP (<a href="http://partsregistry.org/wiki/index.php?title=Part:BBa_K515105"><b>BBa_K515105</b></a>) had been retained in the cells for 7 weeks either due to the bacteria being in static state or due to very slow growth of the cells. In order to test this assumption, we wanted to observe the retainment of plasmid within our chassis in optimal growth conditions without the presence of selective antibiotics. For this observation we required cells which would be continuously dividing. We grew cells in LB for a number of days and supplied the bacteria with fresh LB medium each day so that the microbes went through the different growth phases of bacterial maturation every day. In addition, a small proportion of the culture was plated on an antibiotic-containing agar plate each day and grown overnight to observe the extent of plasmid loss. </p>
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<br>
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<div class="imgbox" style="width:720px;margin:0 auto;">
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<img class="border" src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2011/4/45/ICL_LB_no_antibiotic_73_final.png" width="700" />
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<p><i>Figure 3: </i>E. coli<i> cells grown in LB without antibiotic and subsequently plated on the selective plate have been imaged using Fujifilm LAS 3000 Imager. The samples have been plated after a) 1 day, b) 14 days. In sample after 1 day growth single colonies can not be observed due to high cell density which was plated. In sample after 14 days of growth, decrease in the bacterial density and decrease in fluorescence can be seen. The bacteria were imaged using GFP excitation and emission wavelengths and the picture was kept in the original greyscale format. (Data by Imperial College iGEM team 2011).</i></p>
 +
</div>
 +
<br>
 +
<p>We could observe that even after fourteen days of continuous growth in optimal conditions without the presence of antibiotics, our chassis still managed to express sfGFP and therefore contained the plasmid. However, considerable loss of fluorescence can be seen due to progressive loss of plasmid. Also, a decrease in the number of colonies can be observed. The lower number of colonies is due plasmid loss. Plasmid loss can be attributed to the replication rate of the bacteria being faster than the replication rate of the plasmid.</p>
 +
<p style="text-align:right;font-size:1.3em;"><a href="#" class="collapseLink" onClick="ddaccordion.collapseone('technology', 0); return false">Collapse</a></p>
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</div>
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</div>
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</div>
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<div class="technology">2. Anti-toxin component</div>
 +
<div class="thelanguage">
 +
 +
<h3>2.1 Anti-holin expression</h3>
 +
 +
<p>We have completed stage 1 of the assembly of the Gene Guard. A protein gel showed a clear band of the appropriate size right at the bottom of the gel when compared to a control cell. Therefore, we have sequence verified and shown that the <b><a href="http://partsregistry.org/wiki/index.php?title=Part:BBa_K515104"><b>BBa_K515104</b></a></b> expresses a protein of the appropriate size <b>(Figure 3)</b>.</p>
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<br>
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<div class="imgbox" style="width:300px;margin:0 auto;">
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<img class="border" src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2011/5/54/ICL_Anti-holin_protein_gel.png" width="280" />
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<p><i>Figure 4: Protein gel showing an over-expression band (higher in intensity) of a small protein. Lane 1 and 2 are control and lane 3 and 4 are the anti-holin expressing cells. (Data by Imperial College London iGEM team 2011).</i></p>
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</div>
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<div class="newouterbox">
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<h4 class="newtext">NEW SINCE EUROPE JAMBOREE</h4>
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<div class="newinnerbox">
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<h3>2.2 Gene integration of the anti-holin</h3>
 +
 +
<p>Once we knew that the anti-holin construct was alright and seemed to be producing a small protein we had to excise the insert and ligate it into the CRIM plasmid. This was complicated as the high copy number plasmid was placing a heavy metabolic burden on the cells making them grow incredibly slowly (something that is not desirable for when you have to be working for a deadline). Not only that, the cells seemed to be losing the plasmid after four days on a plate in a cold room and some of the colonies managed to alter the plasmid in a way that made it lose the sfGFP and allowed the cells to grow quickly and out-compete any cells with the correct plasmid. However, after a lot of trial and error we managed to isolate eight plasmids that were possible candidates for the plasmid we wanted to integrate.</p>
 +
 +
<div class="imgbox" style="width:300px;float: right">
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<img class="border" src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2011/4/41/ICL_Anti-holin_genome_integration_PCR.PNG" width="280" />
 +
<p><i>Figure 5: Gel of colonies suspected of containing anti-holin in the genome. The amplified bands of all the colonies correspond to around 300 bp which is approximately the size of the anti-holin gene. The lane furthest to the right is a control in which the anti-holin gene is contained in a pSB1C3 plasmid. (Data by Imperial College London iGEM team 2011).</i></p>
 +
</div>
 +
 +
<p>In order to test these eight colonies we first did an EcoRI and PstI digest and then looked at the size of the insert compared to a control which only contained sfGFP in the CRIM. According to our results, three of the colonies contained an insert that was larger than that of the control. However, the gel red we used to stain the gel seems to do something funny with the buffer we were using to digest making all the bands run higher than they should be running. Therefore, to conclude that the plasmid contained the inserts we wanted we looked for a restriction site that is unique on the anti-holin and the CRIM. We found that the anti-holin construct contains a ClaI site that is also present on the CRIM vector. We performed this digest in another buffer and obtained the expected bands for the three colonies confirming that they contain the anti-holin on the CRIM.</p>
 +
 +
<p>Then we performed the genome integration step which involves the transformation of a cell line containing the helper plasmid<sup>[2]</sup>. In order to test whether the colonies had integrated the CRIM in the correct location we ordered the primers that were used in the original CRIM paper and performed a colony PCR on all the colonies. A few of the colonies had integrated the CRIM twice which could be clearly seen under a blue box. However, the rest of the colonies had a single integration event which could also be seen by their phenotype under blue light.</p>
 +
 +
<p>Finally, we had to prove that the anti-holin gene was now present within the colonies. In order to achieve this we performed numerous PCR's with all kinds of buffers and polymerases until we finally got one to work. Using Taq polymerase and Barnes' buffer we managed to amplify a band of the appropriate size using the same primers that we used to initially amplify the anti-holin from its origin.</p>
 +
 +
<p>As of wiki freeze, we are currently having issues with curing the cells of the helper plasmid. We hope to have this fixed and finally test the system before we fly off to Boston. For the conclusion of this module, please come and see our presentation at MIT.</p>
 +
 +
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<p style="text-align:right;font-size:1.3em;"><a href="#" class="collapseLink" onClick="ddaccordion.collapseone('technology', 0); return false">Collapse</a></p>
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<div class="technology">3. References</div>
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<div class="thelanguage">
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<p>[1] Tanner M et al. (2000) Molecular phylogenetic evidence for noninvasive zoonotic transmission of <i>Staphylococcus intermedius</i> from a canine pet to a human. <i>Journal of Clinical Microbiology</i> <b>38(4):</b> 1628-1631.</p>
 +
<p>[2] Haldimann and Wanner (2001) Conditional-replication, integration, excision, and retrieval: plasmid-host systems for gene structure-function studies of bacteria. Journal of Bacteriology <b>183(21):</b> 6384-6393.</p>
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<p style="text-align:right;font-size:1.3em;"><a href="#" class="collapseLink" onClick="ddaccordion.collapseone('technology', 0); return false">Collapse</a></p>
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<p>The insert is very clearly visible at just below 2 kb. This confirms the presence of superfolder GFP in both cultures. Sequencing of the GFP insert revealed that a singl frameshift mutation had taken place in the colonies grown up from non-sterile soil. No mutations were observed in the superfolder GFP gene contained in the bacteria inoculated in non-sterile soil. This explains the absence and presence of fluorescence in the respective colonies. However, the bacteria were still resistant to the antibiotics and contained the plasmid. We will be replicating these results with other samples to ensure this is representative.
+
<h2>
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<p>In addition, small colonies appeared on the non-sterile plate that had very different colony morphology. We grew this colony up in LB medium containing selective antibiotic and subsequently performed a separate miniprep. No DNA was yielded in this miniprep. It is therefore likely that the plasmid was not transferred to these bacteria but that they either possess natural antibiotic resistance or were able to survive on plates that whose antibiotics had already been depleted by the presence of resistant engineered bacteria.
+
<a href="https://2011.igem.org/Team:Imperial_College_London/Project_Gene_Assembly" style="text-decoration:none;color:#728F1D;float:left;">
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<p>All three samples, the sample from the sterile plate, and the two from the non-sterile plate showing <i>E. coli</i>-like and non-<i>E. coli</i>-like morphologies will be used for 16S ribosomal RNA sequencing (using commonly used primers <sup>[1]</sup>) to determine the bacterial species.
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<img src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2011/8/8e/ICL_PreviousBtn.png" width="40px" style="float;left;"/>
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<h2>3. References:</h2>
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M3: Assembly
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[1] Tanner, M. et al. (2000) Molecular phylogenetic evidence for noninvasive zoonotic transmission of Staphylococcus intermedius from a canine pet to a human. Journal of Clinical Microbiology, 38(4), pp.1628-1631.
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</a>
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<a href="https://2011.igem.org/Team:Imperial_College_London/Project_Gene_Future" style="text-decoration:none;color:#728F1D;float:right;">
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M3: Future Work
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Latest revision as of 00:04, 29 October 2011




Module 3: Gene Guard

Containment is a serious issue concerning the release of genetically modified organisms (GMOs) into the environment. To prevent horizontal gene transfer of the genes we are expressing in our chassis, we have developed a system based on the genes encoding holin, anti-holin and endolysin. We are engineering anti-holin into the genome of our chassis, where it acts as an anti-toxin, and holin and endolysin on plasmid DNA. In the event of horizontal gene transfer with a soil bacterium, holin and endolysin will be transferred without anti-holin, rendering the recipient cell non-viable and effectively containing the Auxin Xpress and Phyto-Route genes in our chassis.




Testing

Horizontal gene transfer is currently an increasingly pressing topic in the field of Synthetic Biology. It is the main limiting factor which is halting the release of GMO's to the environment as while we know what our genetic construct will do in our own chassis we are unsure what it will do in another organism. In order to prevent this issue of genetic containment we have designed a novel toxin/anti-toxin system, the Gene Guard.

In this module we wanted to first test the necessity of this system by performing experiments to see how long E. coli would retain the plasmid in soil as well as under optimal conditions. Then we tested whether the Gene Guard was assembled correctly at each stage. Finally, we wanted to perform an experiment where we transform control cells and our Gene Guard cells with the holin-endolysin plasmid. Is Gene Guard necessary? Moreover, does it work? Stay tuned to find out.

Collapse all | Expand all

1. E. coli survivability in soil and plasmid retainment

1.1 Survivability in soil

We set up a soil experiment to test how long our E. coli chassis can retain its plasmid in soil. We initially transformed chemically competent E. coli DH5α cells with superfolder GFP. These cells were inoculated on small filter discs (about 0.5 cm diameter), which were placed in autoclaved and non-autoclaved soil. We periodically grew up cultures from these filter discs over the course of seven weeks.

After seven weeks, we were able to recover fluorescent bacteria from sterilised and non-autoclaved soil (Figure 1).


Figure 1: Colonies recovered from filter discs and grown on LB plates containing selective antibiotics imaged using a LAS-3000 gel imager. a) Sample taken from non-sterilised soil b) Sample taken from sterilised soil (Data by Imperial College London iGEM team 2011).


Figure 2: Gel digests of bacteria displaying colony morphology typical of E. coli recovered from non-sterilised and sterilised soil. These bacteria exhibited colony morphologies typical of E. coli. (Data by Imperial College iGEM team 2011).


As is visible from these plates, fluorescence was present in bacteria recovered from both sterile and non-sterile soil. A control plate grown from a filter disc inoculated in non-sterilised soil without fluorescent bacteria showed that there was no contamination with other fluorescent lab bacteria. In order to investigate whether the fluorescence observed was due to the presence of the original sfGFP construct and whether the E. coli-like colonies from the non-sterile sample had retained a plasmid, we extracted plasmid DNA using a miniprep kit and did a digest with EcoRI and PstI and with EcoRI on its own to check for presence of the original insert and size of the unfolded vector, respectively (Figure 2).

The insert is very clearly visible at just below 2 kb. This confirms the presence of superfolder GFP in both cultures. Sequencing of the GFP insert revealed that no mutations had taken place in the superfolder GFP gene contained in the bacteria inoculated in non-sterile and sterile soil. This result was obtained in three separate replicates.

In addition, small colonies appeared on the non-sterile plate that had very different colony morphology. We grew this colony up in LB medium containing selective antibiotic and subsequently performed a separate miniprep. No DNA was yielded in this miniprep. It is therefore likely that the plasmid was not transferred to these bacteria but that they either possess natural antibiotic resistance or were able to survive on plates that whose antibiotics had already been depleted by the presence of resistant engineered bacteria.

A possible experiment could be using all three samples, the sample from the sterile plate, and the two from the non-sterile plate showing E. coli-like and non-E. coli-like morphologies for 16S ribosomal RNA sequencing (using commonly used primers[1]) to determine the bacterial species.

This result is extremely important as it shows that plasmids can be retained in E. coli for a very long period of time even in the presence of competition when inoculated in soil. This gives us an indication of the life-span our chassis would have in the soil in its implementation stage. In addition, long retainment of the plasmid means that the chance for horizontal gene transfer increases, rendering this result very important for the Gene Guard module.









NEW SINCE EUROPE JAMBOREE

1.2 Plasmid retainment


After observing survivability and growth of E. coli in soil, we assumed that the plasmid containing sfGFP (BBa_K515105) had been retained in the cells for 7 weeks either due to the bacteria being in static state or due to very slow growth of the cells. In order to test this assumption, we wanted to observe the retainment of plasmid within our chassis in optimal growth conditions without the presence of selective antibiotics. For this observation we required cells which would be continuously dividing. We grew cells in LB for a number of days and supplied the bacteria with fresh LB medium each day so that the microbes went through the different growth phases of bacterial maturation every day. In addition, a small proportion of the culture was plated on an antibiotic-containing agar plate each day and grown overnight to observe the extent of plasmid loss.



Figure 3: E. coli cells grown in LB without antibiotic and subsequently plated on the selective plate have been imaged using Fujifilm LAS 3000 Imager. The samples have been plated after a) 1 day, b) 14 days. In sample after 1 day growth single colonies can not be observed due to high cell density which was plated. In sample after 14 days of growth, decrease in the bacterial density and decrease in fluorescence can be seen. The bacteria were imaged using GFP excitation and emission wavelengths and the picture was kept in the original greyscale format. (Data by Imperial College iGEM team 2011).


We could observe that even after fourteen days of continuous growth in optimal conditions without the presence of antibiotics, our chassis still managed to express sfGFP and therefore contained the plasmid. However, considerable loss of fluorescence can be seen due to progressive loss of plasmid. Also, a decrease in the number of colonies can be observed. The lower number of colonies is due plasmid loss. Plasmid loss can be attributed to the replication rate of the bacteria being faster than the replication rate of the plasmid.

Collapse

2. Anti-toxin component

2.1 Anti-holin expression

We have completed stage 1 of the assembly of the Gene Guard. A protein gel showed a clear band of the appropriate size right at the bottom of the gel when compared to a control cell. Therefore, we have sequence verified and shown that the BBa_K515104 expresses a protein of the appropriate size (Figure 3).


Figure 4: Protein gel showing an over-expression band (higher in intensity) of a small protein. Lane 1 and 2 are control and lane 3 and 4 are the anti-holin expressing cells. (Data by Imperial College London iGEM team 2011).

NEW SINCE EUROPE JAMBOREE

2.2 Gene integration of the anti-holin

Once we knew that the anti-holin construct was alright and seemed to be producing a small protein we had to excise the insert and ligate it into the CRIM plasmid. This was complicated as the high copy number plasmid was placing a heavy metabolic burden on the cells making them grow incredibly slowly (something that is not desirable for when you have to be working for a deadline). Not only that, the cells seemed to be losing the plasmid after four days on a plate in a cold room and some of the colonies managed to alter the plasmid in a way that made it lose the sfGFP and allowed the cells to grow quickly and out-compete any cells with the correct plasmid. However, after a lot of trial and error we managed to isolate eight plasmids that were possible candidates for the plasmid we wanted to integrate.

Figure 5: Gel of colonies suspected of containing anti-holin in the genome. The amplified bands of all the colonies correspond to around 300 bp which is approximately the size of the anti-holin gene. The lane furthest to the right is a control in which the anti-holin gene is contained in a pSB1C3 plasmid. (Data by Imperial College London iGEM team 2011).

In order to test these eight colonies we first did an EcoRI and PstI digest and then looked at the size of the insert compared to a control which only contained sfGFP in the CRIM. According to our results, three of the colonies contained an insert that was larger than that of the control. However, the gel red we used to stain the gel seems to do something funny with the buffer we were using to digest making all the bands run higher than they should be running. Therefore, to conclude that the plasmid contained the inserts we wanted we looked for a restriction site that is unique on the anti-holin and the CRIM. We found that the anti-holin construct contains a ClaI site that is also present on the CRIM vector. We performed this digest in another buffer and obtained the expected bands for the three colonies confirming that they contain the anti-holin on the CRIM.

Then we performed the genome integration step which involves the transformation of a cell line containing the helper plasmid[2]. In order to test whether the colonies had integrated the CRIM in the correct location we ordered the primers that were used in the original CRIM paper and performed a colony PCR on all the colonies. A few of the colonies had integrated the CRIM twice which could be clearly seen under a blue box. However, the rest of the colonies had a single integration event which could also be seen by their phenotype under blue light.

Finally, we had to prove that the anti-holin gene was now present within the colonies. In order to achieve this we performed numerous PCR's with all kinds of buffers and polymerases until we finally got one to work. Using Taq polymerase and Barnes' buffer we managed to amplify a band of the appropriate size using the same primers that we used to initially amplify the anti-holin from its origin.

As of wiki freeze, we are currently having issues with curing the cells of the helper plasmid. We hope to have this fixed and finally test the system before we fly off to Boston. For the conclusion of this module, please come and see our presentation at MIT.

Collapse

3. References

[1] Tanner M et al. (2000) Molecular phylogenetic evidence for noninvasive zoonotic transmission of Staphylococcus intermedius from a canine pet to a human. Journal of Clinical Microbiology 38(4): 1628-1631.

[2] Haldimann and Wanner (2001) Conditional-replication, integration, excision, and retrieval: plasmid-host systems for gene structure-function studies of bacteria. Journal of Bacteriology 183(21): 6384-6393.

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M3: Assembly M3: Future Work