Team:Bilkent UNAM Turkey/Protocols
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- | from Gorman, D.S., and R.P. Levine (1965) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 54, 1665-1669. | + | from Gorman, D.S., and R.P. Levine (1965) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 54, 1665-1669.<br> |
- | This is probably the most widely-used medium at present for experimental work. | + | This is probably the most widely-used medium at present for experimental work.<br> |
- | Following solutions are prepared. | + | Following solutions are prepared.<br> |
- | + | <br> 1. TAP salts | |
- | + | <br> NH4Cl 15.0 g | |
- | + | <br> MgSO4 . 7H2O 4.0 g | |
CaCl2 . 2H2O 2.0 g | CaCl2 . 2H2O 2.0 g | ||
- | + | <br> water to 1 liter | |
+ | <br> | ||
+ | <br> 2. phosphate solution | ||
+ | <br> | ||
+ | <br> K2HPO4 28.8 g | ||
+ | <br> KH2PO4 14.4 g | ||
+ | <br> water to 100 ml | ||
+ | <br> | ||
+ | <br>3. Hutner's trace elements | ||
+ | <br> | ||
+ | <br> | ||
- | + | <br>To make the final medium, mix the following: | |
- | + | ||
- | + | ||
- | + | ||
- | + | ||
- | + | <br> 2.42 g Tris | |
+ | <br> 25 ml solution #1 (salts) | ||
+ | <br> 0.375 ml solution #2 (phosphate) | ||
+ | <br> 1.0 ml solution #3 (trace elements) | ||
+ | <br> 1.0 ml glacial acetic acid | ||
+ | <br> water to 1 liter | ||
+ | <br> | ||
+ | <br> For solid medium, add 15 g agar per liter | ||
+ | <br> | ||
+ | <br>Autoclave. | ||
- | + | <br>For Tris-minimal medium omit the acetic acid and titrate the final solution to pH 7.0 with HCl | |
+ | <br> | ||
+ | <br>Reference: [[http://www.chlamy.org/TAP.html]] | ||
+ | <br> | ||
+ | <br>'''Hutner's trace elements''' | ||
+ | <br> | ||
+ | <br> | ||
+ | <br>Hutner et al. (1950) Proc. Am. Philos. Soc. 94, 152-170 | ||
+ | <br> | ||
+ | <br>This mixture is used both in TAP and in the Sueoka high salt medium. | ||
+ | <br> | ||
+ | <br>For a detailed analysis of how well this trace elements solution meets the nutritional requirements of C. reinhardtii, <br>see Merchant et al. (2006) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 1763, 578-594. | ||
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+ | <br>For 1 liter final mix, dissolve each compound in the volume of water indicated. | ||
+ | <br> | ||
+ | <br>The EDTA should be dissolved in boiling water, and the FeSO4 should be prepared last to avoid oxidation. | ||
+ | <br>compound amount water | ||
+ | <br>EDTA disodium salt 50 g 250 ml | ||
+ | <br>ZnSO4 . 7 H2O 22 g 100 ml | ||
+ | <br>H3BO3 11.4 g 200 ml | ||
+ | <br>MnCl2 . 4 H2O 5.06 g 50 ml | ||
+ | <br>CoCl2. 6 H2O 1.61 g 50 ml | ||
+ | <br>CuSO4 . 5 H2O 1.57 g 50 ml | ||
+ | <br>(NH4)6Mo7O24. 4 H2O 1.10 g 50 ml | ||
+ | <br>FeSO4. 7 H2O 4.99 g 50 ml | ||
+ | <br> | ||
+ | <br>Mix all solutions except EDTA. Bring to boil, then add EDTA solution. The mixture should turn green. When <br>everything is dissolved, cool to 70 degrees C. Keeping temperature at 70, add 85 ml hot 20% KOH solution (20 grams / 100 ml final volume).<br> Do NOT use NaOH to adjust the pH. | ||
+ | <br> | ||
+ | <br>Bring the final solution to 1 liter total volume. It should be clear green initially. Stopper the flask with a <br>cotton plug and let it stand for 1-2 weeks, shaking it once a day. The solution should eventually turn purple and <br>leave a rust-brown precipitate, which can be removed by filtering through two layers of Whatman#1 filter paper, <br>repeating the filtration if necessary until the solution is clear. Store refrigerated or frozen convenient <br>aliquots. Some people shorten the time for formation of the precipiate by bubbling the solution with filtered air. | ||
+ | <br> | ||
+ | <br>If no precipitate forms, the solution is still usable. However, you might want to check the pH in this case and <br>adjust it to around 7.0 using either KOH or HCl as needed. | ||
+ | <br> | ||
+ | <br>To prepare sulfur-free trace elements for hydrogen generation, the sulfate salts can be replaced with equimolar <br>chloride salts (ZnCl2 10.0 g; CuCl2 . 2 H2O 1.00 g; FeCl2 . 4 H2O, 3.60 g). . | ||
+ | <br>Reference: [[http://www.chlamy.org/trace.html]] | ||
+ | <br> | ||
+ | <br>A. Glass bead method for nuclear transformation of Chlamydomonas reinhardtii | ||
+ | <br>Materials. | ||
+ | <br>- Cell-wall deficient (e.g. cw15) host cell strain. (If you need to use a strain with a wild-type cell-wall, the <br>cells must be treated with autolysin prior to vortexing with glass beads (step 7).) | ||
+ | <br>- Sterile liquid growth medium (permissive for the host cell line). (Approximately 35mL of culture / transformation <br>plate.) | ||
+ | <br>- Sterile liquid growth medium (corresponding to selective conditions). (This will be used to wash the cells by <br>centrifugation before transformation. Use appropriate medium( minimal, arginine free, etc) depending on the <br>selection for transformants that will be applied.) | ||
+ | <br>- Prepare glass tubes (3 mL) with 0.3g glass beads (Thomas Scientific), sterilize by baking in oven. (A convenient <br>scoop can be made from the bottom of an Eppendorf tube and a blue pipetman tip, glued by gently melting the tip). | ||
+ | <br>- Sterile centrifugation bottles and tubes. | ||
+ | <br>- Sterile, cotton-plugged 5 mL pipets. | ||
+ | <br>- Plates with appropriate solid medium for selection of the transformants. | ||
+ | <br>- DNA with selection marker. (Circular, supercoiled DNA can be used, but in cases where single insertions are <br>desirable (e.g. insertional mutagenesis), a linear DNA fragment is preferable. The amount of DNA used will also <br>influence the number of insertions (approx. range: 0.2 – 1.0 ug / transformation). | ||
+ | <br> | ||
+ | <br>Protocol. | ||
+ | <br>1. Grow cells in appropriate medium (permissive) to a density of ~2 x 106/ mL. | ||
+ | <br>2. Collect cells by centrifugation in sterile centrifugation bottles at room temperature (3500 g x 10 min). Discard <br>supernatant. | ||
+ | <br>3. Resuspend cells in 1/25 – 1/50 initial volume in selective medium with a cotton-plugged pipet. Transfer to a <br>sterile centrifugation tube. | ||
+ | <br>4. Collect cells by centrifugation at room temperature (3500 g x 10 min). Discard supernatant | ||
+ | <br>5. Resuspend cells at approximately in 1/70 initial volume in selective medium (approximately 3.0 x 108 cells / mL. | ||
+ | <br>Count a 1/100 dilution with the hemacytometer under the microscope. Adjust the volume to obtain a concentration of <br>2. x 108 cells / mL. | ||
+ | <br>6. To a tube containing 0.3g glass beads (sterilized by baking) add: | ||
+ | <br>- 0.3 mL cell suspension. | ||
+ | <br>- ~ 0.5 – 1.0 ug DNA. | ||
+ | <br>7. Vortex at full speed for 15 seconds. | ||
+ | <br> | ||
+ | <br>8. Pour the contents of the tube on a selective plate, gently tilt and rotate the plate to spread the medium <br>evenly. | ||
+ | <br>9. Allow the liquid to dry (protect from light to avoid phototactic movements of the cells). Seal the plates with <br>Parafilm (Micropore tape for minimal medium), and incubate under appropriate conditions for selection. (If cells <br>were grown under auxotrophic conditions (acetate, dark) and will be selected for photoautotrophic growth (minimal, <br>light), put the plates in dim light for 16 – 24 hours before transferring to light. Colonies will appear within 1-3 <br>weeks depending on the selection applied.) | ||
+ | <br>References: | ||
+ | <br>Kindle, K. (1990) High-frequency nuclear transformation of Chlamydomonas reinhardtii. Proc. Natl. Acad. USA 87: <br>1228-1232. | ||
+ | <br>B. Electroporation method for nuclear transformation of Chlamydomonas reinhardtii | ||
+ | <br>Materials | ||
+ | <br>- Cell-wall deficient host cell strain | ||
+ | <br>- Sterile centrifugation bottles and tubes | ||
+ | <br>- Electroporation cuvettes | ||
+ | <br>- Plates with appropriate solid medium for selection of the transformants | ||
+ | <br>- DNA with selection marker | ||
+ | <br>- TAP, 40mM sucrose | ||
+ | <br>- TAP, 40mM sucrose, 0.4% PEG 8 000 - Starch 20% | ||
+ | <br>Starch 20% preparation | ||
+ | <br>20 g starch in a centrifuge tube | ||
+ | <br>Wash with ethanol 100% | ||
+ | <br>Wash with water | ||
+ | <br>Repeat 2 times | ||
+ | <br>Resuspend in 100 ml Ethanol 70% | ||
+ | <br>Aliquots of 20 ml and keep at room temperature | ||
+ | <br>The day of transformation, centrifuge an aliquot 1 minute at 1 000 rpm | ||
+ | <br>Wash 4 times with TAP + sucrose 40 mM | ||
+ | <br>Resuspend in 20 ml of TAP + sucrose 40 mM + PEG 8 000 0.4% | ||
+ | <br>Protocol | ||
+ | <br>1. Grow 250 ml of cells to a density of 2 x 106 cells/ml | ||
+ | <br>2. Collect cells by centrifugation at room temperature at 3 500 rpm for 5 minutes in sterile centrifugation <br>bottles. Discard supernatant | ||
+ | <br> | ||
+ | <br>3. Resuspend in 1.25 ml of TAP, 40mM sucrose | ||
+ | <br>4. Incubate on ice 10 minutes | ||
+ | <br>5. Transfer 250 μl of cells in a cuvette containing 1 μg of DNA | ||
+ | <br>6. Incubate at room temperature 5 minutes | ||
+ | <br>7. Electroporate 0.75 kV, 25 μF, no R, 6 msec | ||
+ | <br>8. Incubate at room temperature 10 minutes | ||
+ | <br>9. Add 1 ml of starch 20% and pour the contents of the cuvette on a selective plate, gently tilt and rotate the <br>plate to spread the medium | ||
+ | <br>10. Allow the liquid to dry (protect from light), seal the plates with parafilm and incubate under appropriate <br>conditions for selection of transformants. | ||
+ | <br> | ||
+ | <br>References. | ||
+ | <br>Boynton et al (1988) Chloroplast transformation in Chlamydomonas with high velocity microprojectiles. Science 240: <br>1534-1538. | ||
+ | <br>Finer et al. (1992) Development of the particle inflow gun for DNA delivery to plant cells. Plant Cell Reports 11: <br>323-328. | ||
+ | <br> | ||
Revision as of 00:43, 22 September 2011
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