Team:EPF Lausanne/Protocol

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PROTOCOLS

In this page you will find the protocols that worked well for us.

Agarose Gel Preparation

Materials

  • TAE 1X
  • Agarose
  • GelRed

Procedure

  1. For a 1.2 % agarose gel (small fragments), put 0.6 grams of agarose into 50 mL of TAE 1X. For a 3 % agarose gel (big fragments), put 1.5 g of agarose into 50 mL of TAE 1X.
  2. Warm the solution in the microwave (max. Power) for 30 seconds, or until agarose has melted.
  3. Mix the solution.
  4. Add 1.3uL of Gel Red (1.5 for 3 % gel).
  5. Pour the solution into an agarose gel mold including the comb.
  6. Wait 20 min for the gel to solidify.
  7. Place the gel in TAE 1X and remove comb.
  8. Mix ~200ng of DNA with nuclease free water and loading buffer to a final 1X concentration (total volume of 12uL).
  9. Run the gel for 45 min at 100 Volts (more time if needed). For a 3 % gel, run for 2 hours at 80 Volts.
  10. Take a picture of the gel at the UV detector.

Gibson Assembly Protocol

Materials

  • Plasmids of interest (miniprep)
  • NEB Gibson assembly Kit (Gibson Assembly Master Mix (2X) and chemically competent cells)
  • Deionized H2O

Procedure

  1. Set up the following reaction on ice:
  2. 2-3 Fragments assembly* (X uL) 4-6 Fragments assembly* (X uL)
    Total Amount of Fragments 0.02-0.5 pmols 0.2-1 pmols*
    Gibson Assembly Master Mix (2X) 10 uL 10 uL
    Deionized H2O 10-X uL 10-X uL
    Total Volume 20 uL 20 uL

    *Optimized cloning efficiency is 50-100ng of vectors with 2-3 fold of excess inserts. Use 5 times more of inserts if size is less than 200 bps.

  3. Incubate samples in a thermocycler at 50C for 15 minutes when 2 or 3 fragments are being assembled or 60 minutes when 4-6 fragments are being assembled. Following incubation, store samples on ice or at -20°C for subsequent transformation.
  4. Transform 50 uL of competent cells (provided with the kit) with 2 μl of the assembly reaction, following the transformation protocol.

You can find the original NEB Gison Assembly Protocol here

Thermocompetent E coli cells preparation

Materials

  • Bacterial colony from plate (day 1)
  • LB medium (day 1)
  • DMSO (day 2)
  • Liquid nitrogen (day 2)
  • Sterile Inoue buffer (day 2) – for buffer preparation, see below

Note: the 250 mL of culture can be separated after growth into smaller tubes (for example, to facilitate centrifugation at 4 ºC). Make sure to respect the proportion of all added buffers and solutions.

Procedure

  1. Pick a single colony from a plate that has been incubated overnight at 37 ºC.
  2. Transfer the colony into 30 mL of LB in a 250 mL flask.
  3. Use this starter culture to inoculate three 1-liter flasks with 1 mL of starter culture, each containing 250 mL of LB (there’s no need to make triplicates, one flask is enough to get 100-120 x 200 µL tubes).
  4. Incubate flasks overnight (depends on growth, 8-17 hours) at 22 ºC (room temperature) with shaking at 180 rpm.
  5. Monitor the OD600 (every 45 min) until it reaches 0.55, and transfer the culture on ice for 10 min. It is important to stop growth at 0.55, can be longer than 10 min on ice.
  6. Centrifuge the cells at 2500 g for 10 min at 4 ºC (temperature is important, it’s better if you can do the rest of the protocol in a cold room).
  7. Pour off the medium and remove any remaining drop.
  8. Resuspend cells gently in 240 mL of ice-cold Inoue buffer (0 ºC).
  9. Repeat steps 6 to 8, using only 60 mL of ice-cold Inoue buffer for the resuspention.
  10. Add 4.5 mL of DMSO and store on ice for 10 min.
  11. Dispense 200 µL aliquots of the suspension into sterile microtubes.
  12. Put the tubes in a container and snap-freeze them by pouring liquid nitrogen on them. It is important to pour the liquid nitrogen on them, as they have to freeze very fast; the aliquots are best when small for the same reason.
  13. Store the tubes at -80 ºC until needed. Note: thaw on ice when used.

Inoue Transformation Buffer

Materials

  • MnCl2 · 4H2O
  • CaCl2 · 2H2O
  • KCl
  • Milli-Q water (or bidistilled)
  • Pre-rinsed .45 µm Nalgene filter - 1 or 2, depending on PIPES solution preparation

Procedure

  1. Make .5M PIPES (piperazine‐1,2‐bis[2‐ethanesulfonic acid]) at pH 6.7
    1. Dissolve 15.1 g of PIPES in 30 mL Milli-Q water.
    2. Adjust pH of solution to 6.7 (with KOH or HCl; you can easily add 30 mL of KOH to begin with).
    3. Add Milli-Q water to final volume of 100 mL.
    4. Optional: sterilize solution by vacuum filtration in pre-rinsed Nalgene filter of .45 µm pore size. Not necessary if used for Inoue Buffer.
  2. Dissolve solutes as follows in 800 mL of Milli-Q water.
  3. Reagent Qty/L Final Conc.
    MnCl2 · 4H2O 10.88 g 55 mM
    CaCl2 · 2H2O 2.20 g 15 mM
    KCl 18.65 250 mM
  4. Add 20 mL PIPES (.5 M, pH 6.7).
  5. Adjust total volume to 1 L with Milli-Q water.
  6. Sterilize Inoue Transformation Buffer through pre-rinsed .45 µm Nalgene filter.

Transformation Protocols

NEB transformation protocol

Materials

  • DNA
  • Competent cells
  • SOC medium (SOB + Glucose) - room temperature
  • Petri dish with antibiotic resistance - 37 ºC

Procedure

  1. Thaw competent cells on ice.
  2. Chill 5 ng of ligation mixture in a 1.5 ml microcentrifuge tube and then add 50 µL of competent cells. Do not vortex or mix.
  3. Place the mixture on ice for 30 min (do not mix).
  4. Heat-shock cells at 42 ºC for 30 s in a pre-heated water bath (works better than on a heating block) (do not mix).
  5. Place on ice and add 950 µL of room temperature SOC medium to the tube (make sure that it is not contaminated).
  6. Place tube at 37 ºC for 60 min. Shake or rotate (250 rpm). Warm selection plates to 37 ºC (not necessary, but increases efficiency).
  7. Spread 50-100 µL of samples on plates (dependent on efficiency of the competent cells); incubate overnight at 37 ºC.

You can find the original NEB Transformation Protocol here.

iGEM Transformation Protocol

Materials

  • DNA
  • Competent cells
  • SOC medium (SOB + Glucose)
  • Petri dish with antibiotic resistance

Procedure

  1. Thaw competent cells on ice.
  2. Add 50 µL of thawed competent cells into a pre-chilled 2 mL tube.
  3. Add 5 ng of resuspended DNA to the sample and pipet gently up and down a few times.
  4. Keep the sample on ice for 30 min.
  5. Heat-shock cells at 42 ºC for 60 s in a pre-heated water bath (works better than on a heating block).
  6. Place samples on ice for 5 min (can be more).
  7. Add 200 µL of SOC medium to the sample (make sure that it is not contaminated).
  8. Incubate cells at 37 ºC for 2 hours with shaking or rotating. 2 hours recovery time after incubation helps in transformation efficiency.
  9. Plate 20 µL and 200 µL of the sample on two plates and spread.
  10. Incubate the plates at 37 ºC for 12-14 hours (agar side of the plate has to be up). Note: Incubating for too long will increase the occurrence of satellite colonies (especially if resistant to Ampicillin).

You can find the original iGEM Transformation Protocol here.

Materials

Procedure

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