Difference between revisions of "Team:KU Leuven/Research/Methods"

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Comments on the Protocol:
 
Comments on the Protocol:
 
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As a starter culture you can use an overnight grown 3 ml culture which was picked from a single colony. If possible use also for the starter cultures LB free of NaCl.
 
As a starter culture you can use an overnight grown 3 ml culture which was picked from a single colony. If possible use also for the starter cultures LB free of NaCl.
 
OD measurements: this is the step which limits quality most. Bacteria are most competent at OD 0.4-0.6 and 0.9. Because it is very difficult to catch them at OD 0.9 every protocol uses OD 0.4-0.6. If the bacteria are over OD 0.6 the competence will be reduced. While harvesting, never let the bacteria warm up again! If you can, work in a cold room on ice. The quality of the competent cells will compensate for the uncomfortable time. Also, from now on it is not necessary to worry about sterility so much. If you get a contamination, it will result in one or two colonies on a plate, so nothing dramatic.While resuspending the pellets, first take a small volume (5ml) to resuspend the pellet in it. Then add the rest.After the last resuspension, measure the OD of a 1:100 dilution. The dilution should have an OD600 of 0.6. If it is higher, you can dilute the suspension more. Before making aliquots, cool the eppis! (you can put the eppis on ice or freeze them in -20°C freezer). Be fast and let a colleague help you. One fills the tubes the other one closes them.In -80°C the cells will stay good at least half a year. Test them after production and retest them if you are not sure if they are still OK. See the transformation protocol for details. At best you can reach 0.5-1.0 x 109 col/µg plasmid.  
 
OD measurements: this is the step which limits quality most. Bacteria are most competent at OD 0.4-0.6 and 0.9. Because it is very difficult to catch them at OD 0.9 every protocol uses OD 0.4-0.6. If the bacteria are over OD 0.6 the competence will be reduced. While harvesting, never let the bacteria warm up again! If you can, work in a cold room on ice. The quality of the competent cells will compensate for the uncomfortable time. Also, from now on it is not necessary to worry about sterility so much. If you get a contamination, it will result in one or two colonies on a plate, so nothing dramatic.While resuspending the pellets, first take a small volume (5ml) to resuspend the pellet in it. Then add the rest.After the last resuspension, measure the OD of a 1:100 dilution. The dilution should have an OD600 of 0.6. If it is higher, you can dilute the suspension more. Before making aliquots, cool the eppis! (you can put the eppis on ice or freeze them in -20°C freezer). Be fast and let a colleague help you. One fills the tubes the other one closes them.In -80°C the cells will stay good at least half a year. Test them after production and retest them if you are not sure if they are still OK. See the transformation protocol for details. At best you can reach 0.5-1.0 x 109 col/µg plasmid.  

Revision as of 07:52, 2 September 2015

Methods

  • P1 transduction


  • Gibson Assembly


  • Miniprep


  • Gel purification


  • Chemocompetent cells


  • Electrocompetent cells


  • Transformation