Achievements
Characterization of GFP-REACh1 and GFP-REACh2 in Combination with an IPTG-inducible TEV Protease
The characterization of the TEV protease and the REACh1 and REACh2 dark quenchers was performed by introducing both simultaneously into E. coli. The resulting double plasmid cells therefore contained [http://parts.igem.org/Part:BBa_K1319013 K1319013] (GFP-REACh1 fusion protein) or [http://parts.igem.org/Part:BBa_K1319014 K1319014] (GFP-REACh2 fusion protein) and [http://parts.igem.org/Part:BBa_K1319008 K1319008] (IPTG-inducible TEV protease). K1319013 and K1319014 were cloned into a pSB3K3 plasmid backbone and K1319008 into a pSB1C3 backbone, two standard plasmids with different ORIs allowing simultaneous use in one cell.
[http://parts.igem.org/Part:BBa_I20260 I20260] was used as a positive control. I20260 contains the same promoter ([http://parts.igem.org/Part:BBa_J23101 J23101]), the same RBS ([http://parts.igem.org/Part:BBa_B0032 B0032]) and the same version of GFP ([http://parts.igem.org/Part:BBa_E0040 E0040]) and is located on the same plasmid backbone, pSB3K3. Therefore, it is expected that when all fusion proteins are successfully cut by the TEV protease, the fluorescence level of the double plasmid constructs reaches the same level as the positive control of I20260. As a negative control, we used [http://parts.igem.org/Part:BBa_B0015 B0015], a coding sequence of a terminator which should not show any sign of fluorescence.
To better evaluate the fluorescence, we took the observed OD into account in order to achieve a fluorecence reading independent of the amount of cells present. This way, the reading represents of the amount of fluorescence per cell only. To characterize our REACh1/2 constructs in combination with the TEV protease, we carried out a growth experiment. We compared both of the REACh-TEV constructs, a constitutive expression of GFP (I20260) as positive control and B0015 as negative control. For each expression, we ran IPTG-induced and uninduced cultures in parallel. All measurements were done in a biological triplicate.
The negative control B0015 did not exhibit any significant fluorescence, as expected. The positive control I20260 showed a steady increase in fluorescence for the first 5 hours. After that, the fluorescence stayed constant due to the end of the exponential growth phase. In this state, growth becomesstationary and the cells do not produce GFP anymore. As expected, the production is also independent of addition of IPTG.
Both double plasmid constructs K1319013 + K1319008 and K1319014 + K1319008 did not exhibit a strong fluorescence before induction with IPTG. In the uninduced state, the fluorescence stays low and only increases slightly over time. It is significantly weaker than the fluorescence reached by the induced constructs or the positive control but was higher than the negative control. This shows that the promoter system used is not completely shut down without induction but significantly weaker compared to the induced state. The basal level of fluorescence might partly be due to an imperfect dark quenching of GFP by the REACh1 or REACh2.
The induced double plasmid constructs exhibited a fast rise in fluorescence after induction. The signal strenght increased 10-fold over the uninduced constructs. K1319013 + K1319008 reached the the same level of fluorescence as I20260, indicating a complete cleavage of the fusion proteins by the TEV protease. K1319014 + K1319008 did not reach a level of fluorescence as high as K1319013 + K1319008, however, the nearly 10-fold increase in fluorescence after induction is a clear indicator for the TEV protease cutting the fusion protein K1319014. The weaker fluorescence was probably due to a lower expression level of K1319014 in the cells in general.
Summary
The double plasmid systems of K1319013 + K1319008 and K1319014 + K1319008 clearly demonstrate the quenching ability of the REACh1 and REACh2 proteins as well as the funcionality of the TEV protease. Both REACH1 and REACH2 show a significant quenching ability of GFP shown in the difference of fluorescence between the positive control I20260 and the uninduced double plasmid systems. This has also been comfirmed by the sharp increase in fluorescence after induction showing that the TEV protease is successfully able to cut the fusion proteins, and proves a proper expression of both fusion proteins. Combined, this characterization is a validation of the functionality of the REACh1 protein ([http://parts.igem.org/Part:BBa_K1319001 K1319001]), the REACh2 protein ([http://parts.igem.org/Part:BBa_K1319002 K1319002]) and the TEV protease ([http://parts.igem.org/Part:BBa_K1319004 K1319004]).
Comparing Kinetics of the GFP-REACh fusion proteins with a Standard lacI-inducible GFP Expression
To assess the kinetics of the fusion proteins K1319013 (GFP-REACh1) and K1319014 (GFP-REACh2), the double plasmid systems K1319013 + K1319008 and K1319014 + K1319008 were compared to a standard expression of GFP under the control of a lacI promoter in [http://parts.igem.org/Part:BBa_K731520 K731520], a BioBrick made by the iGEM Team TRENTO in 2012. This way, we investigated the prediction a faster fluorescence response with our construct compared to a normal expression.
K731520 and the double plasmid constructs K1319013 + K1319008 and K1319014 + K1319008 were cultivated in E. coli BL21(DE3), and fluorescence and OD were measured. Once again, the fluorescence was adjusted for the OD to show a relative fluorescence on a per cell basis. Besides, we carefully compared the difference between the induced and uninduced state. This difference, the fluorescence quotient, serves as a better indicator for a system which is used as a sensor because the difference between an on and off state is more important for a clear and unmistakable signal than to the overall fluorescence. Hence, the OD-adjusted fluorescence quotient for both double plasmid constructs and K731520 was obtained and plotted in the following graph.
The graph clearly shows the faster response of the cut GFP-REACh fusion protein compared to a standard GFP expression. Both fluorescence signals of the double plasmid constructs achieve a higher difference in fluorescence signal between induced and uninduced state as well as at a faster rate. This proves the hypothesis made earlier about the kinetics of the GFP-REACh fusion protein combined with the TEV protease.
Summary
The kinetics of the fusion protein combined with the TEV protease exhibits the exact characteristics as predicted. The response is clearly faster than normal expression by accumulating a reservoir of fusion proteins which are not fluorescing due to the dark quencher attached to them. This reservoir is then activated by the induction of the TEV protease expression. Production of the protease results in the cleavage of the fusion protein, releasing GFP from the dark quencher and disturbing the interaction between the FRET pair. This results in the observed faster fluorescence reaction due to the amplificating effect of the TEV protease in which every one TEV protease can account for many fluorescence proteins being activated.
Characterizing the GFP-REACh Constructs in our Sensor Chips
To further characterize the REACh construct, they were introduced into the sensor cells which were then induced with 2 µL IPTG with a concentration of 100 mM. Subsequently, we took fluorescence measurement read-outs (GFP, excitation 496 ± 9 nm, emission 516 ± 9 nm) roughly every 10 min in the plate reader. The results were plotted in the heatmap shown on the left.
The heatmap shows an increase of fluorescence from blue (no fluorescence) to red (high fluorescence). It is clearly visible that the induced chips are exhibiting a significantly higher fluorescence than the uninduced chips. This again shows that the constructs work as intended: The TEV protease cuts the linker so that the fusion protein is separated into GFP and a dark quencher, disabling the quenching. GFP has a clear fluorescence emission after the fusion protein has been successfully cut into two pieces by the TEV protease.
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