William and Mary Team
As part of their project, the William and Mary (W&M) iGEM Team were imaging cells expressing a variety of fluorescent proteins, including RFP, CFP, GFP, and YFP. Their constructs are being used for the Interlab Measurement study. As part of the measurement track the W&M team assembled fluorescent constructs, and measured and reported their fluorescence. The samples were sent to us to confirm the correct assembly of the parts by validating their fluorescence. Their interest in seeing how their constructs performed (in terms of fluorescent output) perfectly matched our own need to test OpenScope on cell samples rather than fluorescent beads. In addition, optical components were obtained to extend our imaging capabilities to both GFP and RFP. In particular, RFP imaging has not been tested previously.
The W&M team were kind enough to send us dried DNA samples containing constructs for GFP and RFP expression in E. coli. Details on the protocols used to resuspend the DNA and to transform the cells can be found below.
Transformation Protocol
Context
Using E. Coli K12 Dh5 alpha cells
Dry plasmid for two different GFP constructs in duplicate (so 4 samples total) sent on filter paper
All constructs on Amp resistance backbones pSB1C3
Constructs are J23106 + I13504 on pSB1C3, and J23117 + I13504 on pSB1C3
Constructs generated through DNA synthesizing the insert (J231XX + I13504) and using Gibson Assembly to insert it into the Amp backbone
Objective:
Transform cells with the constructs provided
Image the cells for RFP and GFP fluorescence using OpenScope to confirm functionality of the inserts, and the microscope itself
DNA Extraction:
Adapted from: Extraction protocol
Cut center of circles out of the filter paper
Added 50 µl of EB buffer to resuspend DNA
Pipetted up and down to mix
Transformation:
Adapted from: Transformation protocol
Add 1 µl of DNA extract to thawed out competent Top10 E. coli cells (except control plate)
Mixture allowed to stand on ice for 15 minutes
Cells heat shocked for 30 seconds at 42˚
Mixture allowed to stand on ice for 5 minutes
100 µl of LB added at room temperature
Cells incubated for 1hr at 37˚ with shaking at 120 rpm
Cells plated out on Amp plates containing rich medium
Imaging:
Fluorescent samples were then visualised with OpenScope using two set-ups:
Standard set-up, using single LED illumination (470 nm, 100mW) and GFP epi-cube
Non-standard set-up, using high brightness LED (470nm, 3W) and GFP epi-cube
Results:
Earlier testing using the standard set-up (single LED illumination, GFP epi-cube) indicated that visualising fluorescent beads was possible with OpenScope (Fig. 1).
Fig. 1: GFP-coated fluorescent beads visualised using OpenScope under standard set-up. Images were captured on 14.09.15 using the Webshell, and are unedited.
Testing using the commercial fluorescence microscope confirmed that the samples had phenotypes as reported by William and Mary. Both constructs resulted in GFP expression in E. coli. J23106+I13504 demonstrated increased fluorescence intensity relative to J23117+I13504.
A control slide (sample taken from the agar of the control plate, untransformed cells plated on Amp) was first tested to establish a fluorescence-free baseline (Fig. 2a). The duplicate J23106+I13504 samples were then tested using the standard set-up and non-standard set-up. Fluorescence was detected (Fig. 2b and 2c).
Fig. 2: a Control slide (left) showing no fluorescence b J23106+I13504 samples imaged using standard set-up showing fluorescence under 470nm excitation (centre) c J23106+I13504 samples imaged using non-standard set-up (right). All images were captured using the Webshell on 15.09.15 and are unedited.
Duplicate J23117+I13504 samples were then tested using standard set-up and the non-standard set-up, but the brightness was insufficient to image the fluorescence. This confirms the reduced fluorescence intensity of the J23117+I13504 samples compared to the J23106+I13504 samples.