Team:Freiburg/Results

From 2011.igem.org

(Difference between revisions)
(Experimental setup)
(Experimental setup)
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==Experimental setup==
 
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According to ''Adey et al.'' the plastic binding domain (pbd) binds to the polystyrene surface of micro titer plates (96 well plates). To investigate the binding properties of the plastic binding tag we started several spectroscopic assays using a plate reader (FLUOstar Omega) and polystyrene plates (Greiner bio one) To detect the fluorescence of the GFP tagged to the plastic binding domain we used black plates and a well scanning program measuring 10x10 spots in each well of the micro titer plate. We performed several washing steps to find out how much of the proteins can be found in the eluate and how much remains bound on the plate’s surface. To compare the pbd-tagged GFP to a normal GFP without special plastic binding ability we also measured GFP obtained via expression with our diverse PR (Promoter-Ribosome-binding-site constructs). To affirm the results obtained by fluorescence spectroscopy used the Bradford assay and screened for different protein concentrations in transparent polystyrene plates.
 
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The calibration lines necessary for calculation of protein concentration can be found [[Media:Bradford+Fluorescence calibration.pdf|here]].
 
===<span style="color:grey;">Plastic binding domain</span>===
===<span style="color:grey;">Plastic binding domain</span>===
[http://partsregistry.org/Part:BBa_K608404 BBa_K608404]
[http://partsregistry.org/Part:BBa_K608404 BBa_K608404]
IPTG-inducible Promoter with plastic binding domain-tagged GFP
IPTG-inducible Promoter with plastic binding domain-tagged GFP
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====Experimental setup====
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According to ''Adey et al.'' the plastic binding domain (pbd) binds to the polystyrene surface of micro titer plates (96 well plates). To investigate the binding properties of the plastic binding tag we started several spectroscopic assays using a plate reader (FLUOstar Omega) and polystyrene plates (Greiner bio one) To detect the fluorescence of the GFP tagged to the plastic binding domain we used black plates and a well scanning program measuring 10x10 spots in each well of the micro titer plate. We performed several washing steps to find out how much of the proteins can be found in the eluate and how much remains bound on the plate’s surface. To compare the pbd-tagged GFP to a normal GFP without special plastic binding ability we also measured GFP obtained via expression with our diverse PR (Promoter-Ribosome-binding-site constructs). To affirm the results obtained by fluorescence spectroscopy used the Bradford assay and screened for different protein concentrations in transparent polystyrene plates.
 +
The calibration lines necessary for calculation of protein concentration can be found [[Media:Bradford+Fluorescence calibration.pdf|here]].
[[Image:picture 1 pbd.jpg|250px|right|thumb|Picture 1: % of tagged (red) or untagged (blue) GFP remaining in the well after washing compared to previous washing step / original concentration]] After the first measurement of the basic fluorescence intensity we transferred the samples onto another well, refilled the exhausted well with PBS and measured both eluate and remaining protein. In a second washing step the liquid was taken out of the first well again and given to another well. This washing was performed a third time, resulting in three eluates and a triply washed well with more or less protein remaining on the walls.
[[Image:picture 1 pbd.jpg|250px|right|thumb|Picture 1: % of tagged (red) or untagged (blue) GFP remaining in the well after washing compared to previous washing step / original concentration]] After the first measurement of the basic fluorescence intensity we transferred the samples onto another well, refilled the exhausted well with PBS and measured both eluate and remaining protein. In a second washing step the liquid was taken out of the first well again and given to another well. This washing was performed a third time, resulting in three eluates and a triply washed well with more or less protein remaining on the walls.

Revision as of 02:43, 22 September 2011


This is the wiki page
of the Freiburger student
team competing for iGEM 2011.
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