Team:ULB-Brussels/Project/WetLab
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- | <h2>II. E. | + | <h2>II. E.coli Chassis </h2> |
<h3>A. Screening of different 2A-like sequences</h3> | <h3>A. Screening of different 2A-like sequences</h3> | ||
<p>In order to make an effective screening of different 2A peptides (referred to as "2A" in the rest of this work), we will need to design a plasmid containing 2 molecular markers (the $\small Red$ $\small Fluorescent$ $\small Protein$ (RFP) and the alkaline phosphatase (phoA)) separated by a 2A peptide (RFP::2A::phoA). After cloning this plasmid in bacteria lacking the phoA gene in their genome and after growth on chromogenic and selective XP-medium, we should be able to observe 4 types of results: </p> | <p>In order to make an effective screening of different 2A peptides (referred to as "2A" in the rest of this work), we will need to design a plasmid containing 2 molecular markers (the $\small Red$ $\small Fluorescent$ $\small Protein$ (RFP) and the alkaline phosphatase (phoA)) separated by a 2A peptide (RFP::2A::phoA). After cloning this plasmid in bacteria lacking the phoA gene in their genome and after growth on chromogenic and selective XP-medium, we should be able to observe 4 types of results: </p> | ||
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- | <h2>III. S. | + | <h2>III. S.cerevisiae Chassis </h2> |
<h3> A. P2A peptide cleavage rate - Modelling </h3> | <h3> A. P2A peptide cleavage rate - Modelling </h3> | ||
<p>The modelling team needs to know the cleavage rate of p2A in order to compute the effectiveness of $\MyColi$. It will also give us quantitative expectation of the empiric measurement, which could lead to interesting axis of research if the measurement is too different from the prediction. </p> | <p>The modelling team needs to know the cleavage rate of p2A in order to compute the effectiveness of $\MyColi$. It will also give us quantitative expectation of the empiric measurement, which could lead to interesting axis of research if the measurement is too different from the prediction. </p> | ||
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<h2>IV. Constructions and Biobricks Summaries </h2> | <h2>IV. Constructions and Biobricks Summaries </h2> | ||
- | <!-- Needs to complete the | + | <!-- Needs to complete the Biobricks page ! --> |
<p>In order to complete our project, we will need to build 11 recombinant plasmids (6 in $\EColi$, 5 in $\SCere$). Each chassis consists in an independent project, which should enable us to complete at least one of them at the end of the summer. </p> | <p>In order to complete our project, we will need to build 11 recombinant plasmids (6 in $\EColi$, 5 in $\SCere$). Each chassis consists in an independent project, which should enable us to complete at least one of them at the end of the summer. </p> | ||
<!-- Table 1 to end --> | <!-- Table 1 to end --> | ||
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<section style="text-align: justify; margin: 50px"> | <section style="text-align: justify; margin: 50px"> | ||
<h2>Electroporation</h2> | <h2>Electroporation</h2> | ||
- | <p>Dyalisis (with 0. | + | <p>Dyalisis (with 0.0250µm filter) for 20 minutes of 12µl of ligation solution and 12µl of digested plasmid.</p> |
Place 50µl of electrocompetent bacteria in an cold electroporation cell (don't touch the electrodes). Inject the dyalisis product into the eletrocompetent cell.</p> | Place 50µl of electrocompetent bacteria in an cold electroporation cell (don't touch the electrodes). Inject the dyalisis product into the eletrocompetent cell.</p> | ||
<p>Insert the electrocompetent cell into the electroporation machine, and electroporate at 250V. Without spark and if the time constant approximates 4.6, all go well.</p> | <p>Insert the electrocompetent cell into the electroporation machine, and electroporate at 250V. Without spark and if the time constant approximates 4.6, all go well.</p> | ||
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Available <a href="http://www.intechopen.com/books/innovations-inbiotechnology/translating-2a-research-into-practice"><i> here </i></a>. </p> | Available <a href="http://www.intechopen.com/books/innovations-inbiotechnology/translating-2a-research-into-practice"><i> here </i></a>. </p> | ||
[3] M. van Geest & J.S. Lolkema, (2000). Membrane Topology and Insertion of Membrane Proteins: Search for Topogenic Signals, Microbiol. Mol. Biol. Rev. March 2000 vol. 64 no. 1 13-33. </p> | [3] M. van Geest & J.S. Lolkema, (2000). Membrane Topology and Insertion of Membrane Proteins: Search for Topogenic Signals, Microbiol. Mol. Biol. Rev. March 2000 vol. 64 no. 1 13-33. </p> | ||
- | [4] F. Delvigne, M. Boxus, S. Ingels & P. Thonart, (2009). Bioreactor mixing efficiency modulates the activity of a prpoS::GFP reporter gene in E. | + | [4] F. Delvigne, M. Boxus, S. Ingels & P. Thonart, (2009). Bioreactor mixing efficiency modulates the activity of a prpoS::GFP reporter gene in E.coli, Microbial Cell Factories 2009, 8:15. </p> |
<!-- 5 and 6 are now numbers 3 and 4 --> | <!-- 5 and 6 are now numbers 3 and 4 --> | ||
<!-- [3] == [2] ! --> | <!-- [3] == [2] ! --> |
Revision as of 21:30, 9 October 2014
$~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ \newcommand{\MyColi}{{\small Mighty\hspace{0.12cm}Coli}} \newcommand{\Stabi}{\small Stabi}$ $\newcommand{\EColi}{\small E.coli} \newcommand{\SCere}{\small S.cerevisae}\\[0cm] ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ \newcommand{\PI}{\small PI}$ $\newcommand{\Igo}{\Large\mathcal{I}} \newcommand{\Tgo}{\Large\mathcal{T}} \newcommand{\Ogo}{\Large\mathcal{O}} ~$
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