Team:Amsterdam/Labwork/Protocols
From 2011.igem.org
Contents
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Making LB Medium (P1.)
Luria-Bertani Medium (aka L-Broth or LB Medium). (Bertani says LB really stands for lysogeny broth.) LB is a standard growth medium for a variety of bacteria and conditions.
Ingredients
- 10 g Bacto-tryptone
- 5 g yeast extract
- 10 g NaCl
Note: There are two formulations of LB, Miller and Lennox, that differ in the amount of NaCl. Lennox has less salt, only 5 g/L. The Qiagen miniprep kit recommends LB with 10 g NaCl for highest plasmid yields.
Protocol
- Mix dry ingredients and add distilled water up to 1 Liter
- Pour into 2 L flask (or greater)
- Autoclave (liquid cycle)
- 250°F, 22psi, 30 minutes
Notes: We do not pH medium when we make it on the fly. However, if it is really important, pH the medium to 7.0 with 5M NaOH (~200µL). We usually obtain this from the kitchen.
Source
Adapted From:
J. Sambrook, D.W. Russell, Molecular Cloning: A Laboratory Manual (Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press, New York, ed. 3, 2001) pg. A2.2
Making SOB Medium (P2.)
SOB Medium. Used in growing bacteria for preparing chemically competent cells
Ingredients
- 0.5% (w/v) yeast extract
- 2% (w/v) tryptone
- 10 mM NaCl
- 2.5 mM KCl
- 20 mM MgSO4
Per liter:
- 5 g yeast extract
- 20 g tryptone
- 0.584 g NaCl
- 0.186 g KCl
- 2.4 g MgSO4
Note: Some formulations of SOB use 10 mM MgCl2 and 10 mM MgSO4 instead of 20 mM MgSO4.
SOB medium is also available dry premixed from Difco, 0443-17.
Adjust to pH 7.5 prior to use. This requires approximately 25 ml of 1M NaOH per liter.
15/10 medium
Growth of competent TOP10 cells in Example 2 of the Bloom05 patent is performed in 15/10 broth, which is similar to SOB:
- 1.5% yeast extract
- 1% Bacto-Tryptone
- 10mM NaCl
- 2mM KCl
- 10 mM MgCl2
- 10 mM MgSO4
Source
Adapted From:
F. Ausubel et al., Short Protocols in Molecular Biology (John Wiley & Sons, ed. 4, 1999) pg. A1-36
Making SOC Medium (P3.)
SOC Medium.
Ingredients
- SOB
- 20 mM glucose
Protocol
- Follow directions to make 1 liter of Making SOB Medium (P2.) media
- After cooling medium to less than 50°C, add 20 ml filter sterilized 20% glucose solution
Source
Adapted From:
F. Ausubel et al., Short Protocols in Molecular Biology (John Wiley & Sons, ed. 4, 1999) pg. A1-36
Making Competent Cells (P4.)
This protocol is a variant of the Hanahan protocol Hanahan91 using CCMB80 buffer for DH10B, TOP10 and MachI strains. It builds on Example 2 of the [http://openwetware.org/images/b/bd/Pat6855494.pdf Bloom05 patent] as well. This protocol has been tested on NEB10, TOP10, MachI and [http://openwetware.org/wiki/Talk:TOP10_chemically_competent_cells BL21(DE3)] cells. See [http://openwetware.org/wiki/Bacterial_Transformation OWW Bacterial Transformation page] for a more general discussion of other techniques. The [http://openwetware.org/images/0/0c/Pat6960464.pdf Jesse '464 patent] describes using this buffer for DH5α cells. The [http://openwetware.org/images/c/c2/Pat6709852.pdf Bloom04] patent describes the use of essentially the same protocol for the Invitrogen Mach 1 cells.
This is the chemical transformation protocol used by Tom Knight and the [http://partsregistry.org Registry of Standard Biological Parts].
Materials
- Detergent-free, sterile glassware and plasticware (see procedure)
- Table-top OD600nm spectrophotometer
- SOB
CCMB80 buffer
- 10 mM KOAc pH 7.0 (10 ml of a 1M stock/L)
- 80 mM CaCl2.2H2O (11.8 g/L)
- 20 mM MnCl2.4H2O (4.0 g/L)
- 10 mM MgCl2.6H2O (2.0 g/L)
- 10% glycerol (100 ml/L)
- adjust pH DOWN to 6.4 with 0.1N HCl if necessary
- adjusting pH up will precipitate manganese dioxide from Mn containing solutions.
- sterile filter and store at 4°C
- slight dark precipitate appears not to affect its function
Procedure
Preparing glassware and media
Eliminating detergent
Detergent is a major inhibitor of competent cell growth and transformation. Glass and plastic must be detergent free for these protocols. The easiest way to do this is to avoid washing glassware, and simply rinse it out. Autoclaving glassware filled 3/4 with DI water is an effective way to remove most detergent residue. Media and buffers should be prepared in detergent free glassware and cultures grown up in detergent free glassware.
Prechill plasticware and glassware
Prechill 250mL centrifuge tubes and screw cap tubes before use.
Preparing seed stocks
- Streak TOP10 cells on an SOB plate and grow for single colonies at 23°C
- room temperature works well
- Pick single colonies into 2 ml of SOB medium and shake overnight at 23°C
- room temperature works well
- Add glycerol to 15%
- Aliquot 1 ml samples to Nunc cryotubes
- Place tubes into a zip lock bag, immerse bag into a dry ice/ethanol bath for 5 minutes
- This step may not be necessary
- Place in -80°C freezer indefinitely.
Preparing competent cells
- Inoculate 250 ml of SOB medium with 1 ml vial of seed stock and grow at 20°C to an OD600nm of 0.3
- This takes approximately 16 hours.
- Controlling the temperature makes this a more reproducible process, but is not essential.
- Room temperature will work. You can adjust this temperature somewhat to fit your schedule
- Aim for lower, not higher OD if you can't hit this mark
- Centrifuge at 3000g at 4°C for 10 minutes in a flat bottom centrifuge bottle.
- Flat bottom centrifuge tubes make the fragile cells much easier to resuspend
- It is often easier to resuspend pellets by mixing before adding large amounts of buffer
- Gently resuspend in 80 ml of ice cold CCMB80 buffer
- sometimes this is less than completely gentle. It still works.
- Incubate on ice 20 minutes
- Centrifuge again at 4°C and resuspend in 10 ml of ice cold CCMB80 buffer.
- Test OD of a mixture of 200 μl SOC and 50 μl of the resuspended cells.
- Add chilled CCMB80 to yield a final OD of 1.0-1.5 in this test.
- Incubate on ice for 20 minutes
- Aliquot to chilled screw top 2 ml vials or 50 μl into chilled microtiter plates
- Store at -80°C indefinitely.
- Flash freezing does not appear to be necessary
- Test competence (see below)
- Thawing and refreezing partially used cell aliquots dramatically reduces transformation efficiency by about 3x the first time, and about 6x total after several freeze/thaw cycles.
Measurement of competence
- Transform 50 μl of cells with 1 μl of standard pUC19 plasmid (Invitrogen)
- This is at 10 pg/μl or 10-5 μg/μl
- This can be made by diluting 1 μl of NEB pUC19 plasmid (1 μg/μl, NEB part number N3401S) into 100 ml of TE
- Hold on ice 0.5 hours
- Heat shock 60 sec at 42C
- Add 250 μl SOC
- Incubate at 37 C for 1 hour in 2 ml centrifuge tubes rotated
- using 2ml centrifuge tubes for transformation and regrowth works well because the small volumes flow well when rotated, increasing aeration.
- For our plasmids (pSB1AC3, pSB1AT3) which are chloramphenicol and tetracycline resistant, we find growing for 2 hours yields many more colonies
- Ampicillin and kanamycin appear to do fine with 1 hour growth
- Plate 20 μl on AMP plates using sterile 3.5 mm glass beads
- Good cells should yield around 100 - 400 colonies
- Transformation efficiency is (dilution factor=15) x colony count x 105/µgDNA
- We expect that the transformation efficiency should be between 5x108 and 5x109 cfu/µgDNA
5x Ligation Adjustment Buffer
- Intended to be mixed with ligation reactions to adjust buffer composition to be near the CCMB80 buffer
- KOAc 40 mM (40 ml/liter of 1 M KOAc solution, pH 7.0)
- CaCl2 400 mM (200 ml/l of a 2 M solution)
- MnCl2 100 mM (100 ml/l of a 1 M solution)
- Glycerol 46.8% (468 ml/liter)
- pH adjustment with 2.3% of a 10% acetic acid solution (12.8ml/liter)
- Previous protocol indicated amount of acetic acid added should be 23 ml/liter but that amount was found to be 2X too much per tests on 1.23.07 --Meagan 15:50, 25 January 2007 (EST)
- water to 1 liter
- autoclave or sterile filter
- Test pH adjustment by mixing 4 parts ligation buffer + 1 part 5x ligation adjustment buffer and checking pH to be 6.3 - 6.5
- Reshma P. Shetty 10:49, 11 February 2008 (CST): Use of the ligation adjustment buffer is optional.
References
- Hanahan91 pmid=1943786
- Reusch86 pmid=3536850
- Addison04 pmid=15470891
- Bloom04 US Patent 6,709,852 [http://openwetware.org/images/c/c2/Pat6709852.pdf pat6709852.pdf]
- Bloom05 US Patent 6,855,494 [http://openwetware.org/images/b/bd/Pat6855494.pdf pat6855494.pdf]
- Jesse05 US Patent 6,960,464 [http://openwetware.org/images/0/0c/Pat6960464.pdf pat6960464.pdf]
Linearized Plasmid Backbones
This protocol was developed by Tom Knight, samples of standard Registry plasmid backbones prepared using this method were sent out in the Spring 2011 DNA Distribution kits.
Short single stranded DNA fragments will not ligate to 4 bp overhangs. By creating a very short overhang on a PCR of a plasmid backbone, the remnant, when cut with EcoRI and PstI is sufficiently short that it will not anneal at ligation temperature, and will therefore not ligate. This allows us to build high quality construction plasmid backbone without purifying away the cut fragments remaining after PCR.
We are distributing the prepared construction plasmid as purified PCR products, diluted to standard concentration, but prior to cutting with EcoRI and PstI. Standard assembly will cut this plasmid backbone with EcoRI and PstI at the same time that the two assembled fragments are cut with EcoRI and SpeI and with XbaI and PstI, respectively.
The preparation of this PCR fragment is done with primers having short overhangs past the EcoRI and PstI sites, followed by PCR cleanup, dilution to standard concentration, and quality control testing.
Note: The Registry shipping plasmid backbone is pSB1C3. If you are making linearized plasmid backbone in order to send parts to the Registry, you must use pBS1C3.
Primers:
gccgctgcagtccggcaaaaaa,SB-prep-3P-1 atgaattccagaaatcatccttagcg,SB-prep-2Ea
Diluted to 30 pmol/ul
These primers have been tested with pSB1C3, pSB1A3, pSB1K3, and pSB1T3.
Using the Linearized Plasmid Backbones (P5.)
The Spring 2011 DNA Distribution should come with a set of linearized plasmid backbones: pSB1A3, pSB1C3, pSB1K3, and pSB1T3. The linearized plasmid backbones (25ng/ul at 50ul) should be stored at 4C or lower. Prior to ligation the plasmid backbones need to be cut with EcoRI and PstI.
Digest
- Enzyme Master Mix for Plasmid Backbone (25ul total, for 6 rxns)
- 5 ul NEB Buffer 2
- 0.5 ul BSA
- 0.5 ul [http://www.neb.com/nebecomm/products/productR3101.asp EcoRI-HF]
- 0.5 ul [http://www.neb.com/nebecomm/products/productR0140.asp PstI]
- 0.5 ul [http://www.neb.com/nebecomm/products/productR0176.asp DpnI]
- 18 ul dH20
- Digest Plasmid Backbone
- Add 4 ul linearized plasmid backbone (25ng/ul for 100ng total)
- Add 4 ul of Enzyme Master Mix
- Digest 37C/30 min, heat kill 80C/20 min
Ligation
- Add 2ul of digested plasmid backbone (25 ng)
- Add equimolar amount of EcoRI-HF SpeI digested fragment (< 3 ul)
- Add equimolar amount of XbaI PstI digested fragment (< 3 ul)
- Add 1 ul [http://www.neb.com/nebecomm/products/productm0202.asp T4 DNA ligase buffer]. Note: Do not use quick ligase
- Add 0.5 ul [http://www.neb.com/nebecomm/products/productm0202.asp T4 DNA ligase]
- Add water to 10 ul
- Ligate 16C/30 min, heat kill 80C/20 min
- Transform with 1-2 ul of product
Making Linearized Plasmid Backbones
Bulk Production
The following is the protocol that we used to create the linearized plasmid backbones shipped with the Spring 2011 DNA Distribution. The protocol is in 96 well format, but may be scaled down to suit smaller batches.
2011 Plasmid Backbone Production
PCR mix
- 9.6ml of [http://products.invitrogen.com/ivgn/product/10790020?ICID=search-10790020 PCR Supermix High Fidelity]
- 67 ul of primer SB-prep-2Eb
- 67 ul of primer SB-prep-3P-1
- 10 ul of template DNA at 10ng/ul (100ng total) (Note: Do not use a sample of linearized plasmid backbones (PCRed) as a template)
- Aliquot 100ul per well in 96 well plate
PCR program
- 95C/2min
- 95C/30s
- 55C/30s
- 68C/3min
- Repeat cycle (steps 2 to 4, 37 more times)
- 68C/10min
PCR cleanup
Purification of 96 well plates was done through Promega [http://www.promega.com/products/dna-and-rna-purification/dna-fragment-purification/wizard-sv-96-pcr-clean_up-system/ Wizard SV 96 PCR Clean-Up kit] and a vacuum manifold. The protocol below follows the manual, with a few changes (in bold), however please see manual for setup instructions.
- Add equal volume of Binding Solution to PCR product (add 100ul of Binding Solution to 100ul of product)
- Mix by pipetting, transfer all 200ul to Binding Plate, let sit for 1 min
- Apply vacuum until samples pass through, about 30s to 1 min
- Add 200 ul of freshly prepared 80% ethanol to Binding Plate, let sit for 1min, apply vacuum until ethanol passes through, about 20s to 1 min.
- Repeat ethanol wash (step 4) twice more for three washes total
- Remove Binding Plate from wash manifold, blot on kim wipes, reinstall in wash manifold
- Apply vacuum for 4 min to fully dry Binding Plate
- Remove Binding Plate from wash manifold, blot on kim wipes, reinstall in collection manifold
- Add 50ul of TE buffer, let sit for 1 min, apply vacuum until eluted, about 1 min
- Repeat 50ul elution (step 9) for a total elution of 100ul
- Measure concentration on nanodrop, adjust to 25 ng/ul with TE
Single Reaction PCR
PCR mix
- 100 ul [http://products.invitrogen.com/ivgn/product/10790020?ICID=search-10790020 PCR Supermix High Fidelity]
- 0.7 ul of SB-prep-3P-1
- 0.7 ul of SB-prep-2Ea
- 0.5 ul template DNA at 10 ng/ul (Note: Do not use a sample of linearized plasmid backbones (PCRed) as a template)
PCR program
- 94C/2min
- 94C/30s
- 55C/30s
- 68C/3min
- Repeat cycle (steps 2 to 4, 35 more times)
- 68C/10min
- Digest with DpnI enzyme: 2ul in 100ul reaction, incubate 37C/hour; heat kill 80C/20min
PCR cleanup
[http://www.qiagen.com/products/dnacleanup/gelpcrsicleanupsystems/qiaquickpcrpurificationkit.aspx QIAquick PCR Purification]
- Add 500 ul Qiagen buffer PB
- Spin through a column twice, discard flowthrough
- Wash 1x with 700 ul buffer PB
- Wash 2x with 760 ul buffer PE
- Discard liquid, spin dry at 17000g for 3 min
- Elute into a new tube twice with 50 ul of TE (100 ul total)
Quality Control
We recommend QCing constructed linearized plasmid backbones, to test success of PCR, ligation efficiency, and background.
- Run unpurified PCR product (1 ul) on a gel to verify the correct band and concentration and lack of side products.
- Test concentration of purified PCR product. Note: Expected yield should be 40ng/ul or higher. Adjust to 25ng/ul with TE.
- Run a digest and ligation test with purified PCR product to determine EcoRI and PstI cutting and ligation efficiency.
Digest
- Digest Master Mix (10rxns)
- 15 ul NEB Buffer 2
- 1.5 ul BSA
- 90 ul dH20
- Run Digest
- 4 ul of plasmid backbone (approximately 100 ng)
- 10.5 ul of Digest Master Mix
- 0.5 ul either EcoRI-HF or PstI enzyme (not both!)
- Digest 37C/30min; 80C/20 min
- Proceed directly to ligation
Ligation
- Ligation Master Mix (10rxns)
- 20 ul T4 DNA ligase buffer
- 5 ul T4 DNA ligase
- 25 ul water
- Ligation Test
- Add 5 ul of ligation master mix to digested product
- Ligate 16C/30min; 80C/20 min
- Run all 20 ul on a gel
- Compare intensity of the single and double length bands. More efficient ligations will show stronger double length bands than single.
Transformation test
- Transform 1 ul of the diluted final product into highly competent cells
- Control transform 10 pg of pUC19
- Plate on the appropriate antibiotic
- Observe few colonies. Any colonies represent background to the three antibiotic assembly process
- Quantify the effective amount of remaining circular DNA able to transform