Getting Started
Using the Autoclave
Media
LB
BG11
Antibiotic Stocks
Plates
Basics
Keeping Them Sterile
Standard Molecular Workflow
Liquid Culture
Cryostocking
Miniprep (Qiagen, modified slightly)
Nanodrop
Digestion:
Verification
Gel Casting
Gel Loading & Running
Gel Imaging (using Typhoon scanner)
Gel Extraction & Cleanup
Ligation (adapted from openwetware ligation protocol):
Chemically Competent Transformation (protocol from Kosuke)
Electrocompetent Cells
Preparing Electrocompetent Cells
Transforming Electrocompetent Cells
PAGE Gel Preparation, Running, and Scanning (proteins only)
PCR (Polymerase Chain Reaction)
Templates
1. Amplifying from a plasmid or isolated sample of DNA
2. Colony PCR
Polymerases and Master Mixes
GoTaq Green
Q5 Polymerase
Thermocycler Conditions
Taq polymerase (GoTaq Green)
Q5
PCR Cleanup (using Wizard SV Gel and PCR Purification System)
Sample Prep
Binding of DNA
Washing
Elution
ELIM Biopharm: Primers & Sequencing
Primers
Designing Primers
Special BioBrick considerations
Ordering Primers
Primer Dilution (stock preparation)
Sequencing
Ordering Sequencing
Premix Specifications (plasmid DNA)
Checking the Data
Gene Synthesis
iGEM and the Registry of Standard Biological Parts
Using iGEM Registry DNA
Creating a Registry Page for a New Part
Submitting Physical Parts to the Registry
3A Assembly
Cultures
Bacillus subtilis
Bacillus subtilis Transformation
Escherichia coli (adapted from Dr. Shih’s protocol)
Site Directed Mutagenesis
Getting Started
Using the Autoclave
Interns can’t. Ask someone with a hard badge. Typical runs take about an hour, but could be two hours if the boiler isn’t warmed up.
Media
Most of the time you'll autoclave the media after putting it together, although certain chemicals (vitamins, antibiotics) need to be added after to prevent degradation.
LB
Use for E. coli and B. subtilis
Mix 20g/L of LB Broth powder into the desired volume of deionized water (which you can get in room 346, we'll show you how the filter system works)
We highly recommend that you mix liquid media in small aliquots (100-200mL) so the whole batch doesn't get ruined when one gets contaminated (LB is a very rich medium, so this happens a lot)
BG11
Use for Anabaena
We have 50x stocks of BG11 in the fridge that are or can be aliquoted into 20mL samples
Add 20mL of 50x stock to 980mL sterile water (autoclaved beforehand, and allowed to cool)
This media doesn't have any solid carbon source, so it's pretty safe to make larger quantities
Antibiotic Stocks
We usually make our liquid stocks of antibiotics at 1000X, so that you add 1μl/mL to whatever media you are using. While the desired working concentration might change based on the plasmid, here are the stock concentrations we usually use for common antibiotics:
Chloramphenicol: 34mg/mL (100% EtOH)
Ampicillin: 100mg/mL (50% EtOH)
Kanamycin: 20mg/mL (H20 only)
Neomycin: 50mg/mL (H20 only)
Tetracycline: 15mg/mL (50% EtOH)
You'll want to make these by filter sterilizing; you cannot autoclave antibiotics. We
typically store them in 1mL aliquots in a -20C or -30C freezer. Those stocks made with ethanol will not freeze. Those in water only will require thaw time. Once you take an aliquot, it becomes yours.
Plates
Basics
Using any typical media recipe, add 1.5% agar (15g/L) to the mixture before autoclaving
After removing from autoclave, let cool until it is cool enough to hold for several seconds comfortably
Otherwise the media will be too hot and break down the antibiotic
Note: Chlor is a bit more heat-tolerant than other antibiotics
Add the appropriate amount of antibiotic
Pour enough media into each petri dish to just cover the bottom
E. coli grows on the surface, so the agar layer shouldn’t be thick
Since the dishes come in sleeves of 25, it is usually good to make 500mL of the medium
Keeping Them Sterile
We have a UV hood that we usually make plates in
Gather everything you'll need to make the plates (empty petri dishes, pipette, pipette tip, sharpie, etc) and wipe down with 70% ethanol before placing in the hood
Sterilize for ~5-10min by exposing to UV lamp
Standard Molecular Workflow
Note: PCR is its own huge beast, so it's been given its own section following this one
Liquid Culture
Inoculation:
Pipette tips work great for swiping or stabbing a colony
Media:
LB works great for both E. coli and B. subtilis
Temperature:
37°C works fine for both E. coli and B. subtilis
Shaker speed
250 RPM for optimal growth, 200 OK
Antibiotics:
If it is appropriate to select for the strain using antibiotics, add 1μl per mL of 1000X stock solution
For best results (but certainly not necessary):
Pre-culture for ~6hrs in 20-25% final culture volume
Incubate in container with capacity >200% culture volume, overnight
Cryostocking
Any time you generate a new strain (i.e. transform a new combination of DNA parts) you
should generate miniprep (for DNA) and a cryostock (for frozen cells).
It's pretty simple:
In a cryostock tube (1.8mL tube with screw top), mix a dense liquid culture of the strain with glycerol to the proper percentage (I think there's some flexibility but Jesse usually goes for 20% glycerol for both E. coli and B. subtilis)
So this might look something like: 500μl liquid culture + 500μl 40% glycerol solution
Sterile technique is super important when making cryostocks
Miniprep (Qiagen, modified slightly)
Spin falcon tubes @7600rpm, @4C, for 5min to pellet
Discard supernatant by decanting
Reconstitute pellet in 250μl cold Buffer P1 and transfer to microcentrifuge tube
Add 350μl Buffer P2, invert 4-6 times to mix thoroughly
Let stand for less than 5 minutes
The timing for the next few steps is important. Don’t delay.
Add 350μl Buffer N3, immediately invert 4-6 time to mix thoroughly
This step will form a white precipitate
Immediately spin @max speed for 10min @room temperature
Pipette supernatant into spin column while avoiding the precipitate
Centrifuge 60sec, discard flow-through
Add 750μl Buffer PE to column, let sit for 60sec, spin 60sec
Discard supernatant and spin another 60s to dry
Transfer to clean microfuge tube and let sit 60s
Add 30 or 50μl qH2O and let sit 60s, spin 60s
30 results in higher concentration but lower total yield
Pipette and reapply flow through, sit 60s, spin 60s
Nanodrop
The nanodrop machine is located in room 347 (ask us for the passcode). The actual nanodrop machine is a small white boxy thing with a raisable arm, to the right of the thinkpad computer at the back of the room. Before you go the room, make sure to bring a pipette that can
measure 1μl, as well as an aliquot of PCR quality water or your specific elution buffer.
Unlock the computer.
Lift the arm on the nanodrop and load 1 μL of your water/elution buffer aliquot onto the small, silver well (pedestal). Gently close the arm, then reopen the arm and dab the blank liquid off the machine with a kimwipe. Make sure you wipe off the metal nubbin on the arm of the machine, too. Put the arm back down. All this ensures that the nanodrop reading area is clean to begin with
Open “Nanodrop 2000”
Select “nucleic acid” from the opening menu
A window will pop asking if you want to add this data to the previously saved file. Don’t unless you were the previous user.
The nanodrop will perform a self calibration test for a few seconds
Select the appropriate type of nucleic acid you have in your sample from the dropdown menu. Most likely this is DNA.
Next you need to run a blank. Repeat step 2., but while the arm is down click the "blank" button on the screen.
Load 1 μL of your sample. Gently close the arm and click the “Read” button
Let it read. If you clicked to create a new file in step 3a, then it will ask you for your filename info and stuff like that. Go through that.
Finally, the results should pop up on the graph and the table below it. Make sure the graph has a good 260/280 ratio (usually greater than 1.75). The graph should have a pronounced peak in the left-center of the plot, and should be pretty low on the right side. Additionally, I think there is the beginnings of another peak at the very far left side of the plot, but it doesn’t matter. The curve of the graph should look relatively smooth
Generally, the quality of the read should be very high for something like a miniprep and will often be much lower when reading the product of a PCR or digest cleanup
If the graph quality looks pretty good/normal, take note of the "ng/μl" value returned; this is the relevant information giving you the concentration of DNA in your sample
Repeat the scan (literally just click the "Read" button again) 2-3 more times to ensure that the read is consistent, and average the value
Save your data somehow (I just write it down, but you can screen capture if you want) and make sure to write the value on the tube containing the sample, wipe down the nanodrop, gently lower the arm, quit the program, and shut the computer. School’s out, you’re done!
Digestion:
20 μl Recipe for any combination of the EcoRI, XbaI, SpeI, PstI
500-1000 ng DNA (as close to 1 μg as possible)
0.2μl Enzyme 1
0.2μl Enzyme 2
2μl appropriate buffer (see NEB enzyme doubledigest finder; for any
combination of the biobrick enzymes, buffer 2 or buffer 3 will be great)
0.2μl BSA (if necessary, the newer buffers like CutSmart already have it)
Top up with qH20
Mix reagents, adding enzymes last
Incubate at 37°C for 1-2 hrs (<30 min for HF)
Heat kill at 80°C for 20 minutes if proceeding to ligation
Verification
Gel Casting
0.75% agarose
Use if DNA > 1000bp
40mL 1x TAE
0.3 g agarose
1 aliquot (~5μl) gel red
Add dry agarose to clean bottle (small enough to fit in microwave)
Add 40mL 1x TAE buffer
Microwave with cap on but loose, swish periodically, until solution is clear and smooth
Agarose is very easy to overheat. Check it after 30 seconds.
Pipette in gel red, directly into solution (heat stable so don’t worry about the temperature)
Pour into gel tray, making sure that tray is oriented and tightly inserted such that leaks will not occur, and that the gel is level
It helps to pre-wet the rubber seals
Gel Loading & Running
Lane 1 should be ladder; use 1kb ladder or 100bp ladder depending on the size of your DNA samples
Digests can require more (~1.5x) than the usual amount of loading dye
Gel Imaging (using Typhoon scanner)
Always scan a gel immediately after running
Make sure the scanner area is clean; wipe ONLY with 70% ethanol (or DI) and kimtech wipes
Gel should be placed on scanner face-up. That is, the wells should be oriented up, the same way the gel is oriented in the gel box
We'll do an in-lab tutorial for how to use the scanner and its program on the computer
Gel Extraction & Cleanup
Make sure to place gel on transilluminator face down (wells toward the glass)
Remove as much excess gel matrix as possible without overexposing DNA to UV
For cleanup, follow protocol for using the Wizard PCR Cleanup Kit, found below in PCR section
Ligation (adapted from openwetware ligation protocol):
10 μl Recipe
30-50 ng vector DNA (closer to 50 is better)
Equation for calculating ligation ratios
A calculator to make life easy
[vector](Vvector)(ratio of 3 or 5)(bpvector:bpinsert)(1/[insert])=Vinsert
where [vector] is concentration of vector (ng/mL)
(Vvector) is volume of vector (µL)
ratio of 3 or 5 relates to the 3:1 or 5:1 ratio of insert to vector
bpvector:bpinsert is the ratio of vector to insert base pairs
[insert] is the concentration of insert (ng/µL)
Vinsert is the volume of insert to add (µL)
1μl (10%) 10X T4 DNA ligase buffer
0.5μl (.5%) T4 DNA ligase
Top up w/ qH20 up to 10uL
Procedure
Usually heat inactivation of digests is sufficient; difficult ligations might require a proper cleanup
As often as possible, use isolated inserts and vectors to avoid unwanted ligations
If the reaction needs to be greater than 10μl, adjust amount of 10X ligase buffer and T4 DNA ligase so that they remain at 1% and .5% by volume, respectively
For cohesive (sticky) ends, incubate at 16°C overnight or room temperature for 10 minutes.
For blunt ends or single base overhangs, incubate at 16°C overnight or room temperature for 2 hours(alternatively, high concentration T4 DNA Ligase can be used in a 10 minute ligation).
Chemically Competent Transformation (protocol from Kosuke)
Materials
1 aliquot of competent cells
2-4μl ligation mixture
500μl SOC media
Procedure
Thaw cells at 4°C for 5 minutes
Gently mix in ligation product
Incubate at 4°C for 20 min
Meanwhile, warm SOC media to 37C
Heat shock at 42°C for 30 sec
45 sec for NEB5-alpha cells
Return to 4°C for 1 min
Add 500μl pre-heated SOC
Incubate at 37°C for 1hr with shaking
Meanwhile, pre-heat plates to 37°C
Plate, one plate w/ 100μl, one plate w/ 150μl
Electrocompetent Cells
Alex is a fan of electroporation because it’s faster and more efficient than the chemical protocol. The only downside is that it’s incompatible with the NEB Instant Ligase mixes.
We got good results from these protocols.
Preparing Electrocompetent Cells
Prepare a 10ml pre-culture on LB medium. For best results, avoid using overnight preculture.
Dilute pre-culture as follows: 4 ml in 200-ml of fresh LB pre-warmed at 37°C.
Grow the cells at 37°C.
When OD (600) = 0.6 is reached, chill the culture on ice as quickly as possible.
Centrifuge in disposable tubes (50ml disposable type) for 5 minutes at 3000 rpm.
Resuspend the pellets in 25ml freshly prepared water¹ (MilliQ®quality) at ice temp.
Repeat steps 5 & 6 twice more.
Resuspend the pooled pellets in 400µl (cell concentration should be 1 x 1010 cells x ml−¹) freshly prepared water (MilliQ® quality) at ice temp.
Check the final volume and add 10% of glycerol (molecular biology grade).
Use immediately or aliquot the electrocompetent cells to 100µl in 10% glycerol and freeze at - 70°.
Transforming Electrocompetent Cells
Defrost an aliquot of electrocompetent cells
Load an Eppendorf tube chilled on ice with 40µl of cell suspension
Add 1 to 5µl of ligation mix (DNA)
Mix well and keep on ice for >1 minute
Select 1800 Volt as the output voltage (for 1mm cuvettes, for 2mm use 2500)
Load an electroporation cuvette chilled on ice with the cell suspension
Avoid putting your finger on the aluminium electrodes or it will dramatically increase the temperature of the sample and increase the risk of arcing
Trigger the pulse immediately
As soon as possible (less than 30 seconds) resuspend the cells in the cuvette with 1ml SOC medium (the quality of the SOC is important)
Transfer the cells in an appropriate vessel and incubate at 37°C for 1 hour (30 minutes is usually enough)
250 rpm shaker is best
Plate the cells on the selective medium. 100uL and 300uL are good starting amounts.
Incubate overnight and look for transformant colonies in the morning
PAGE Gel Preparation, Running, and Scanning (proteins only)
Setting up and Running the Gel
1. Use NuPAGE (NOT Bolt) gels, located in middle room fridge on top shelf, far left
2. Keep the gel in its case and rinse off with DW water
3. Carefully remove comb from the case by pulling out from both sides, be gentle! Also remove white tape on bottom for current circulation when gel is running
4. Keep gel in its case. Load gel into running box (upright). Make sure gel is secure and the segment for loading the wells is on the side opposite you.
5. Add SDS running buffer (not MOPS!) so wells overflow into front of the box
6. Before loading must wash out each gel well by pipetting gently up and down
7. Prepare loading samples (also refer to gel kit instructions)
a) 7.5ul of product + 2.5ul SeeBlue loading dye in each well
b) 6ul SeeBlue NuPAGE ladder (purple top, keep refrigerated)
8. BEFORE LOADING SAMPLES HEAT THEM for 10 minutes at 70 C
9. Load gel with ladder and dyed samples
NOTE: When you load a PAGE gel push pipette against the front of the box. The gel has 12 wells, if you do not need to use all 12, then avoid using the very first and the very last well; as the gel runs the current pulls unevenly from the sides (creates “smiling effect” that can make interpreting the scan more difficult)
10. Run gel for 35 minutes at 150-200V
Fixing and Staining the Gel
1. After running, the gel needs to be fixed, stained overnight, and then washed before it can be scanned on the Typhoon scanner. Prepare fixing solution for the gel (ideally you should do this while the gel is running)
Fix solution recipe:
50% methanol, 7% acetic acid, fill with milliQ water to 200ul
2. Remove the gel from the running case and place it in a clean container with fixing solution
3. Put gel in 100ul of fix solution and shake in RT at 80rpm for 30 minutes
4. Repeat step 3 with remaining 100ul fix solution
5. Remove all fix solution from container with the gel
6. Soak gel in 60ml SYPRO Ruby gel stain, shake overnight at 80rpm in RT.
Washing and Scanning the Gel
1. Remove PAGE gel from overnight staining and put into new, clean container
2. Wash gel in 100ul of wash solution for 30 minutes in 70-80rpm for 30 minutes
Wash solution recipe:
10% methanol, 7% acetic acid, fill with milliQ water until 100ul
3. Remove gel from wash and rinse twice with DI water for 5 minutes to remove all wash to prevent damage to scanner
Scanning a Protein PAGE gel
1. Same as DNA gel, specify size of the gel for the scanner. When loading, make sure to be gentle with the gel (it’s fragile!) and carefully separate combs when on the scanner so you can tell which well is which
PCR (Polymerase Chain Reaction)
Templates
1. Amplifying from a plasmid or isolated sample of DNA
You have a tube of linear or plasmid DNA like that from the registry directly and don’t want to wait for the the transformation and miniprep. (note: you should go through the time-intensive transformation in parallel regardless).
In this case, you need first to know the concentration of your sample. If you don’t know it or it was not provided, you can learn the concentration for your sample by using the nanodrop machine located in room 347. It depends on the size of your template, but as a general rule, you need on the order of 25-50 ng template minimum for a successful PCR, so adjust the volume of your template in your PCR accordingly.
2. Colony PCR
You can also amplify plasmid or genomic DNA straight from live cultures of organisms containing your desired sequence. You will usually have cultures in one of two forms: either in liquid culture, or spread on an agar plate. If you are amplifying from liquid culture, grow it up as much as you can and add 1μL of the culture to the PCR mix. If you're amplifying from the plate, there is no need to add a volume; instead, simply take a pipette with a pipette tip from the green box, gently touch the pipette tip to the desired colony on the plate (try to take as little from the plate as possible; agar can screw up PCRs), and then insert your pipette tip into the
PCR mixture and pipette up and down to mix.
Polymerases and Master Mixes
GoTaq Green
http://www.promega.com/resources/protocols/product-information-sheets/g/gotaq-green-master-mix-m712-protocol/
Q5 Polymerase
Q5 is a fast, high-fidelity polymerase that even beats Phusion. Unlike Taq, Q5 produces blunt-end amplicons. It’s also very expensive so treat it carefully.
25 μL recipe:
5 μL 5x Q5 buffer
0.5 μL 10mM dNTPS
1.25 μL forward primer (10μM dilution)
1.25 μL reverse primer (10μM dilution)
Template DNA (a couple nanograms worth)
qH2O to 24.75 μL
0.25 μL Q5 enzyme (add last)
The 50uL recipe (when you needs lots of product) is simply double.
Thermocycler Conditions
Taq polymerase (GoTaq Green)
Initial Denature: 95°C 2 min
The official Platinum Blue protocol calls for
94°C for 3 min, although I have never done it that way. Either will work, I am sure.
Denature: 94°C 15-30 secs
Use a shorter time if the amplicon is a relatively short segment of DNA, and a longer time if it is a relatively long piece of DNA.
Annealing X°C 15-30 secs
This is the most crucial step of the thermocycle! Your annealing temperature will be determined by the melting temperature of your primers. As a general rule, your annealing temperature should be about 5° lower than the lowest melting temperature of your primer pair. Additionally, if you are trying to add tails to you amplicon (e.g. you are trying to add restriction sites to the ends of your DNA template), you may need to drop the annealing temperature down even more. I have had primers with melting temperatures above 65° that needed to be annealed at 42°.
Additionally, if a primer may be difficult to anneal to the template, you can increase the annealing time for better results.
Extension 72° X seconds
Taq extension runs at 1kb per minute. Therefore, allow the extension step enough time to fully copy your entire amplicon.
Repeat steps 2-4 32X
Final Extension 72°C 5 min
Hold 4°C forever
Q5
Initial Denature at 98°C for 30 sec
Denature at 98°C for 10 sec
3. Annealing at X°C for 15-30 sec
Use the NEB calculator: https://www.neb.com/tools-and-resources/interactive-tools/tm-calculator
Extension at 72°C for X seconds
Q5 is much faster than Taq, and requires 20-30 sec per kb.
Go to step two 25-35X
Final extension at 72°C for 2 min
Hold 10°C forever (zero minutes=forever)
The standard protocols for various polymerases can be found at these
addresses:
GoTaq:
http://www.promega.com/resources/protocols/product-information-sheets/g/gotaq-green-master-mix-m712-protocol/
Q5:
https://www.neb.com/protocols/2012/09/27/pcr-using-q5-high-fidelity-dna-polymerase-m0491
PCR Cleanup (using Wizard SV Gel and PCR Purification System)
Sample Prep
Gel Extraction:
Following electrophoresis, excise DNA band from gel and place gel slice in a 1.5ml microcentrifuge tube.
Trim the slice of parts that don’t contain DNA
Weigh gel slice (by weighing the tube containing the slice and subtracting the mass of the empty tube)
Add 10μl Membrane Binding Solution per 10 mg of gel slice. Vortex and incubate at 50–65°C until gel slice is completely dissolved (usually 10-15 minutes)
PCR Amplifications:
Add an equal volume of Membrane Binding Solution to the PCR amplification.
Binding of DNA
Insert SV Minicolumn into Collection Tube.
Transfer dissolved gel mixture or prepared PCR product to the Minicolumn assembly. Incubate at room temperature for 1 minute.
Centrifuge at max speed for 1 minute. Discard flowthrough and reinsert Minicolumn into Collection Tube. If you are worried about the final concentration of your purified product, you can repeat this step to maximize the amount of DNA bound to the filter.
Washing
Add 700μl Membrane Wash Solution (ethanol added). Centrifuge at max speed for 1 minute. Discard flowthrough and reinsert Minicolumn into Collection Tube.
Repeat Step 4 with 500μl Membrane Wash Solution. Centrifuge at max speed for 5 minutes.
Empty the Collection Tube and re-centrifuge the column assembly for 1 minute with the microcentrifuge lid open (or off) to allow evaporation of any residual ethanol.
Elution
Carefully transfer Minicolumn to a clean 1.5ml microcentrifuge tube.
Add 30-50 μL of Nuclease-Free Water to the center of the minicolumn. Incubate at room temperature for 1 minute. Centrifuge at max speed for 1 minute. By adding less water, like 30 μl, you will increase the concentration but decrease the total amount of product. On the flipside, if you want to maximize product, you can maximize elution volume so long as you don’t care about concentration.
Note: you can also increase yield by warming the elution water before hand. I usually warm it to 40°C with good results.
Discard Minicolumn and take sample to nanodrop (see 'Nanodrop', below)
Store DNA at –20°C.
The standard protocols for the SV Wizard Gel and PCR purification kit can be
found here:
http://www.promega.com/resources/protocols/technical-bulletins/
101/wizard-sv-gel-and-pcr-cleanup-system-protocol/
ELIM Biopharm: Primers & Sequencing
Primers
Designing Primers
Choose a forward and reverse primer from a location in the gene or plasmid that is sure to include the portion desired for amplification or sequencing
For sequencing, it is desirable if possible to have primers that fall 50-150bp outside your desired region, to ensure that accurate reading occurs for the whole gene (often the first and last ~100bp in the read are very inaccurate)
For PCR remember that the sequence portion corresponding to the primers themselves will be amplified also
Primers should normally be between 15-30bp in length (around 20bp is ideal)
Desired melting temperatures are generally between 55-65°C
As you will see, melting temperature is a function of length and GC content, so it is often difficult to design primers in regions much greater than 50% AT
Forward and reverse primers should have the same melting temperature, or with a difference of no more than 3 degrees
The annealing temperature used for a pair of primers should be set at 5 degrees below the lower melting point of the primer pair
Using a tool like ApE or Geneious makes it easy to select certain sections of a sequence to check for primer features like melting point and GC content
IDTs 'Oligo Analyzer' is a great tool to check for primer dimerization, hairpin structures, etc.
http://www.idtdna.com/analyzer/Applications/OligoAnalyzer/
Use this tool or something like it as a final check to make sure your primers will not be likely to react with themselves or each other around the temperatures they will be active for gene interaction
NCBI Primer Blast is another great tool. It can be used both to help design the primers and to ensure that the primers you choose will not amplify any genomic DNA in a colony based amplification
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/tools/primer-blast/
Primer Blast isn’t perfect. It will often miss off-target products, or predict ones that don’t happen.
Special BioBrick considerations
Ordering Primers
We order our primers from ELIM Biopharm (http://elimbio.com/)
The rest is fairly self-explanatory, but we'll do a walk through when you get here
Primers <36bp ordered before 5pm will arrive the next day
Delivery is around 2:15pm
Primer Dilution (stock preparation)
Once you receive your primers, you need to dilute them; Kosuke does 1/10 dilutions,
iGEM typically uses 1/20 (10μM) dilutions
Typically we create 100-200μl working stocks; it will take a long time to use up that much primer
Example:
10μL primer stock
190μL qH2O or TE buffer
Sequencing
Two main reasons:
After a difficult pcr/gel extraction to ensure the product is correct
After cloning/biobricking to ensure no errors were introduced during PCR
Ordering Sequencing
You can put in the order using the same general procedure for ordering primers
The important difference is either before or right after ordering, you need to actually prepare the DNA that will be picked up for sequencing (see Premix Specifications below)
For DNA pickups for sequencing, the guy usually shows up around 2PM, so if you want an order picked up day of, be sure to have everything put together by lunchtime
This can usually be done even if you're miniprepping the sample that morning; preparing the sample for sequencing doesn't take too long unless you have a lot of samples to prepare
He always picks up the samples from room 3 , there's a file box labeled "ELIM"
Print out the order confirmation sheet and staple a baggy with your samples to it and put it in the box
Premix Specifications (plasmid DNA)
Prepare the DNA as specified by ELIM. For plasmids, this looks like:
500ng DNA
0.8μl primer (one primer per sequencing reaction)
Top up w/ qH20 to 15μL
For sequencing other DNA (e.g. PCR product) see the ELIM website for specifications:
http://www.elimbio.com/Sample_Preparation.htm
Checking the Data
Usually sequencing data will be available the morning after you put in the order, sometimes early, sometimes closer to lunchtime
The results can be accessed again through the ELIM site; after signing in, there is an option to "retrieve/download sequencing data"
You can either just view, or download the files
I recommend downloading all the files because you'll want to view them all anyway
Tools like ApE or Geneious will be needed to properly read the files
Each sequence read will come with a '.ab1' file that visualizes the data, and a '.seq' file that actually gives you the sequence they read
Check the ab1 file first; you're hoping for strong clear peaks, where one of four different colors represents each possible base
Typically the beginning and end of the read will look sloppy, but the middle few hundred bases should look very pretty
If the read looks pretty clean, then open the .seq file and compare the sequence to the theoretical sequence
Gene Synthesis
iGEM and the Registry of Standard Biological Parts
Using iGEM Registry DNA
Detailed instructions for locating a particular part and reconstituting that DNA from the iGEM distribution plates can be found here:
http://partsregistry.org/Help:Distribution_Kits
The plates are currently stored in the freezer in room 378
Important points:
Transform the DNA into an E. coli cloning strain e.g. DH5α
As always when generating a new strain: grow a liquid culture, cryostock the strain, and miniprep to have a source of the DNA
Creating a Registry Page for a New Part
The iGEM site guides you through this pretty well. From the main page for the Registry
you will see a link for 'add a part' and go from there
You will have options for submitting basic parts or composite parts; usually whatever functional unit you end up using in the iGEM projects will be a composite part, but for every composite part you'll also want to create an individual part page for the basic parts from which it is made In fact, the basic parts pages should be made first, so you can reference them in creating the page for the composite part
Cultures
Bacillus subtilis
Bacillus subtilis Transformation
Phase 1
1.inoculate 25% (5mL) of desired final volume of LB with BS168 in the morning,
in container >200% final volume (50mL falcon tube)
2.incubate @37C for ~6hrs, then top up to final volume (20mL) LB to incubate
overnight
3.spin and pellet @3000g for 5 min
4.wash with cold (4C) sterile deionized water by resuspending (in 25-50%
original volume) and spinning @3000g for 5min
5.discard supernatant, repeat twice more
6.finally resuspend in 1% of the original culture volume (from which the pellet
was formed) with cold (4C) 30% PEG solution
7.aliquot into 100μl samples (use pre-chilled tubes)
8.freeze immediately @ -80C
9.after waiting overnight, proceed to phase 2
Phase 2 (electroporation)
1.thaw cells @ 4C until liquid
2.transfer to cold .2cm electroporation cuvette
3.apply current with cuvette uncapped, @ 25μF, 2.5kV (12.5kV/cm), 400ohms
4.immediately add 2ml of prewarmed SOC to cuvette, cap, and mix by inverting
several times
5.transfer cuvette contents to 15ml falcon tube by pipetting or decanting and
incubate for 90 min @37C
6.plate on preheated selective agar (if unsure about efficiency, try 100μl, 15μl)
Escherichia coli (adapted from Dr. Shih’s protocol)
Doubling time for E.coli in ideal conditions, 37ºC = 20 minutes
Media recipes
LB
10 g tryptone
5 g yeast extract
10g NaCl
Autoclave for 20 minutes
To make LB agar, add 15 g agar or bacto-agar prior to autoclaving (makes ~ 25)
M9 media (minimal media useful for fluorescent measurements as LB is autofluorescent) NOTE: if not growing in M9 but just measuring fluorescence, M9 salts is sufficient.
Autoclave ingredients as 10X-100X stock separately prior to mixing in sterile water
1X M9 salt
2 mM MgSO4
0.1mM CaCl2
0.4% - 2% carbon source (glucose, glycerol, etc)
To make M9 Agar, add 15g agar or bacto-agar to 1 L M9 salts prior to autoclaving, then add other ingredients (makes ~25 plates).
Antibiotic selection - Make stocks in sterile water, add to warm autoclaved media. Do not autoclave, as it will degrade the antibiotic.
Ampicilllin - 100 ug/mL, 100mg/mL 1000X stock
Kanamycin - 30 - 50 ug/mL, 30 mg/mL 1000X stock
Chloramphenical - 20 ug/mL 20mg/mL 1000X stock in ethanol
Streptomycin - 100 ug/mL
Storage - add 50% glycerol to stationary phase culture for final concentration of 15-25% glycerol, freeze at -80ºC.
Site Directed Mutagenesis
1. How to make primers (http://openwetware.org/wiki/Richard_Lab:Site_Directed_Mutagenesis)
Double primer method:
Design mutagenesis primers.
The targeted mutation should be included into both primers.
The mutation can be as close as 4 bases from the 5-terminus.
The mutation should be at least 8 bases from the 3-terminus.
At least eight non-overlapping bases should be introduced at the 3-end of each primer.
At least one G or C should be at the end of each primer.
Design your primers (including the mutations) to have a Tm >=78°C.
Single primer method:
Design mutagenesis primer(s).
The targeted mutation should be in the middle of the primer
Design your primers (including the mutations) to have a Tm >=78°C.
2. How to use thermal cycling:
Specifics can be found in the QuikChange Lightning Site-Directed Mutagenesis Kit
http://www.chem.agilent.com/library/usermanuals/Public/210518.pdf
http://www.biomedcentral.com/1472-6750/8/91