Difference between revisions of "Team:Czech Republic/Project/Synthetic haploids"

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[[File:Czech Republic MATa.png | 300px | thumb | center | The MATx plasmid ]]
  
 
= Construction =
 
= Construction =

Revision as of 14:05, 17 September 2015

Synthetic Haploids

Abstract

To use the mating pheromones as signals for multicellular communication synthetic haploids of both mating types that preserve the ability to process an extracellular signal via pheromone response pathway even after mating - in diploid state are needed. However, all components of the pathway are switched-off naturally in diploid cells, therefore synthetic haploid strains that mate into a diploid with a functional pheromone pathway were designed. As a result, the IODs can use the robust natural signaling pathway for signal transduction.

Key Achievements

  • Constructed a set of reporter promoters for yeast cells.
  • Characterized reporter promoters in all mating types
  • Designed and materialized synthetic MATa and MATx strains
  • Built a synthetic diploid strain with a functional yeast pheromone pathway
  • Demonstrated the correct functionality of yeast pheromone pathway in synthetic diploids

Yeast pheromone pathway

Schematic of induction and repression of a-specific, alpha-specific, and haploid specific genes in different mating types

Yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae exists either in haploid or diploid state. The two mating types are called MATa and MATα and differ only within approx. 2 kbp long region on chromosome III called MAT locus. MATa locus expresses transcription factors a1 and a2, whereas MATα locus expresses transcription factors α1 and α2. Both types express three groups of genes, which are:

  • haploid-specific genes (h-sg)
  • a-specific genes (a-sg)
  • α-specific genes (α-sg)


As their names indicate, these genes are only active in haploids, MATa cells, or MATα cells, respectively.

Both mating types constantly produce small amounts of mating type-specific pheromone and when the two cells of opposite types are in close proximity they identify each other by sensing each other’s pheromone. The response to detected pheromone is facilitated by so called pheromone pathway, which is a cascade of chemical reactions that results in the preparation for mating. Since only haploids mate, the yeast pheromone pathway is only functional in haploid cells.

Design

Reconstruction of yeast pheromone pathway in diploid cell

Schematic of the yeast pheromone pathway.

The schematic shows that h-sg genes are switched-off in diploid cell and since all genes included in yeast pheromone pathway signal transduction (except from the pheromone receptor)are h-sg, the pathway can be reconstructed by switching them on. It can be managed by interrupting one of the h-sg regulators - a1 or α2. While a1 has no function in haploid, its deletion has no effect in haploid cell, but in diploid it interrupts the repression of h-sg.

Repression and induction schematic of the synthetic MATa/α strains

Naturally in haploids, after exposure to mating pheromone yeast pheromone pathway results in induction of expression of mating genes that initiate the mating process. Since it is not desired for the synthetic diploid to mate, the initiation of mating process needs to be disrupted. It can be achieved by repressing Ste12 transcription in the diploid. While Ste12 is fundamental in both haploid types in the process of mating, the designed mechanism must preserve transcription in haploid cells and repress it in diploid.


For this purpose, mechanism of tetracycline-controlled transcriptional activation was used: a1 gene in MATa was replaced by TetR and STE12 was put under the control of synthetic a-specific promoter that is repressed in the same way as a-sg. In MATα, α1 repression was preserved by placing it under the control of pTet and STE12 was also put under the control of pTet. As a result, transcription of Ste12 is preserved in both haploids and repressed in diploid - pTet-STE12 thanks to TetR repressor that is expressed from MATa chromosome, and a-specific STE12 thanks to α2. Also h-sgare expressed because of disruptedrepression by deleting a1 preserving transcription of all the genes forming yeast pheromone pathway.

MATα integration plasmid

MATα integration plasmid carries a synthetic MATα locus that integrates into the wild-type locus putting both α1 and α2 transcription factors on synthetic promoters and inserting STE12 gene with its promoter.

Wild-type MATα locus


Wild-type MATα locus carries genes that code for α1 and α2 transcription factors. The locus codes for α1 in one direction and for α2 in the opposite direction simultaneously. Therefore any changes in α1 gene’s promoter would disrupt the promoter of α2. This problem was resolved by putting also the α2 on a synthetic promoter.

Integrated parts

All part are cloned into pRSII406 integrating vector (from Addgene). The final plasmid shown in the picture includes SnabI restriction site for linearization before chromosomal integration. The whole plasmid is integrated between the α1 and α2 ORFs.


α1 on pTet promoter
ORF of α1 is a genomic sequence, it also serves as a homologous part for the plasmid integration. Promoter pTet has sequence taken from [http://www.nature.com/nbt/journal/v27/n5/abs/nbt.1536.html here] (the T16 version). This promoter is repressed by TetR (tetracycline) and is active in absence of TetR (see this wikipeadia page for more information about tetracycline-controlled transcriptional activation).


α2 on CYC1 promoter
ORF of α2 is a genomic sequence, it also serves as the second homologous part for the plasmid integration. Promoter CYC1 has sequence taken from [http://www.nature.com/ncomms/2014/140527/ncomms5002/full/ncomms5002.html this page] (the CYC1v3 version).


For both α1 and α2, no synthetic terminators were designed because the terminators (native)will be already within the chromosome after integration.


STE12 on pTet promoter
ORF of ST12 is a genomic sequence that was extracted from chromosome also with the 3’UTR. Therefore, no synthetic terminator was included. Promoter pTet has sequence taken from [http://www.nature.com/nbt/journal/v27/n5/abs/nbt.1536.html here] (the T15 version).


The MATx plasmid

MATa integration plasmid

MATα integration plasmid carries a synthetic MATa locus that integrates into the wild-type locus inserting TetR and STE12 with their promoters into the center of the a1 ORF and thus disrupting it.

Integrated parts

All part are cloned into pRSII406 integrating vector (from Addgene). The final plasmid shown in the picture includes SnabI restriction site for linearization before chromosomal integration. The whole plasmid is integrated within the a1 ORF.


TetR on ADH1 promoter

Tetracycline repressor ORF sequence was taken from Addgene database, the ADH1 promoter sequence was taken from same page. CYC1 terminator is included after TetR, it’s sequence was also taken from this page. Show sequence

STE12 on a-specific CYC1

ORF of ST12 is a genomic sequence that was extracted from chromosome also with the 3’UTR. Sequence of a-specific CYC1 promoter was obtained from Prof. Vershon, who presented series of a-specific promoters[Vershon1999]. It is a CYC1 promoter with inserted α2-Mcm1 binding sequence from AGA2 gene (α2-Mcm1 complex represses a-sg). Show sequence

Parts of a1 ORF

Two parts of a1 OFR are included as homologous parts for chromosomal integration. The plasmid integrates in the center of a1 ORF and disrupts the gene. Show sequence

The MATx plasmid

Construction

Construction of reporter plasmids

The pADH1, pSTE2, pSTE5, and pFUS1 promoters were obtained by PCR from yeast genome (isolated according to standard protocol from 7283 MATx strain). The asCYC1 and pTv3 promoters were obtained by PCR from g-blocks. The primers used for this are as follows:


Promoter Template Primer Primer sequence
pADH1 Yeast genome pAHD1-F ACATCACTCGAGCAACTTCTTTTCTTTTTTTTTCTTTTCTCTCTCCCCC
pADH1-R CTGAGTAAGCTTAGTTGATTGTATGCTTGGTATAGCTTGAAATATTGTGC
asCYC1 yG_MATa_2 asCYC1-F TAGCACCTCGAGCCCGGGAGCAAGATCAAGAT
asCYC1-R AGACATAAGCTTTATTAATTTAGTGTGTGTATTTGTGTTTGTGT
pFUS1 Yeast genome pFUS1-F TAGGGCCTCGAGTAATAATCAGAACTCCAACAATAGTCAACA
pFUS1-R AGACATAAGCTTTTTGATTTTCAGAAACTTGATGGCT
pSTE2 Yeast genome pSTE2-F TAGGGCCTCGAGATCCAATATCACCTGACCTTCATC
pSTE2-R AAGCTTGAATTCTTTTGATTCTTGGATATGGTTCTTAACGGT
pSTE5 Yeast genome pSTE5-F TAGGGCCTCGAGTCAAAGCAGTTTGTGCGATTTG
pSTE5-R AAGCTTGAATTCTTAAAAGTTGTTTCCGCTGTATCC
pTv3 yG_pTv3pTv3 pTv3-F TAGGGCCTCGAGGGACTTCCCACCGCCTTC
pTv3-R AGACATAAGCTTGGATTCTCACAATCCTGTCGG


All promoters were amplified in a single PCR run, with the following conditions:

Property Value
Polymerase Q5
Extension Time 90s
Annealing temperature 58°C
Number of cycles 35


PCR products were then gel verified


INSERT PHOTO_1


and were then purified (insert purification kit name) and restricted by corresponding restriction enzymes, which are listed in the following table


Promoter Enzyme 1 Enzyme 2
pADH1 XhoI HindIII
asCYC1 XhoI HindIII
pFUS1 XhoI HindIII
pSTE2 XhoI EcorI
pSTE5 XhoI EcorI
pTv3 XhoI HindIII

The corresponding vector for reporter plasmids was prepared by restriction and ligation of yeGFP and CYC1 terminator into a pRSII416 CEN plasmid (obtained from Addgene).

Construction of INSERT MATa and INSERT MATx

The sequence of INSERT MATa was ordered as a single gblock yG_MATa with restriction sites at the ends. The sequence of INSERT MATx was ordered as two gblocks, yG_MATx_1 and yG_MATx_2. Upon arrival, the g-blocks were resuspended in TE buffer according to the protocol of the supplier (IDT). All g-blocks were to be cloned to the backbone pRSII415 (obtained from Addgene). To achieve this the g-blocks were restricted by the following enzymes, along with the vector

Part 5' Enzyme 3' Enzyme
yG_MATa EcorI HindIII
yG_MATx_1 HindIII PstI
yG_MATx_2 PstI SpeI
pRSII415(MATa) EcorI HindIII
pRSII415(MATx) SpeI HindIII

The restrictions were all 50 ul reactions with 500 ng of DNA run with standard protocol. Enzymes and the restriction buffer were obtained from NEB. Restrictions were purified (insert purification kit name) and ligated together overnight for 16 hours at 16C. Ligations were then inactivated at 65C for 15 mins. Inactivated ligations were transformed to EC E5alpha cells. After 30 min incubation at 37C, 400 ul of each transformation was plated on a separate LB-M plate supplied with Ampicillin resistance. Plates were left overnight at 37C. The following day, patches were streaked from four from the INSERT MATa plate, and from four colonies from the INSERT MATx plate. Patches were plated on separate LB-M Ampicillin plates for INSERT MATa and INSERT MATx respectively. Plates with patches were left overnight at 37C. The following day, plasmid DNA was obtained from the patches using a miniprep kit(). Obtained plasmids were gel verified (see Validation).

Results

Final constructs

Herein we should describe the final constructs we have obtained, and add verification gels etc.

Validation of reporter plasmids

Validation of INSERT MATa and INSERT MATx

Plasmid DNA obtained from INSERT MATa-pRSII415 was restricted by EcorI and HindIII enzymes (NEB) in a CutSmart Buffer(NEB) for 60 min at 37C. Plasmid DNA obtained from INSERT MATx-pRSII415 was restricted by SpeI and HindIII enzymes (NEB) in a CutSmart Buffer(NEB) for 60 min at 37C. Restrictions were loaded in an NaOH gel. The gel was run for 90 mins at 90V.

Gel photo of INSERT MATa and INSERT MATx verification restriction

Reporter plasmids characterization

Test of mating types

Materials and methods

Used strains

  1. Ecoli E5alpha
  2. 7283 MATx yeast strain
  3. 7284 MATa yeast strain
  4. 10150 MATa/x yeast strain
  5. 6193 MATa yeast strain (URA LEU HIS)
  6. 6194 MATx yeast strain (URA LEU TRP)

Used material

  1. LB-M agar plates with chloramphenicol
  2. LB-M agar plates with ampicillin
  3. 1.5 ml eppendorf tubes
  4. 0.5 ml PCR tubes
  5. 50 ml centrifuge conical base and rim tubes
  6. NucleoSpin Plasmid DNA, RNA, and protein purification Kit
  7. NucleoSpin Gel and PCR Clean-up Kit
  8. LB-M medium with chloramphenicol
  9. NaOH agarose gel and buffer
  10. Sphero Rainbow Calibration Particles, 8 Peaks, 3.0-3.4

Used methods

  1. Transformation
  2. Miniprep
  3. Restriction digest
  4. Ligation
  5. NucleoSpin Gel Clean-up
  6. NucleoSpin Plasmid DNA purification
  7. Flow cytometry


All used protocols can be found here: Protocols

Used software

  1. CFlow Plus
  2. Microsoft Excel
  3. Sphero PMT QC Template

Used Parts

yG_MATa :

AATTCATCTAGAGAAGAAAGCAAAGCCTTAATTCCAAGGAAAAAGAAGAAGTTGCAAAGAAATGTGGCATTACTCCACTTCAAGTAAGAGTTTGGGTATGTAATATGAGAATCAAACTTAAATATATCCTATACGTAGTATGGCGGAAAACATAAACAGAACTCTGTTTAACATTCTAGGTACTGAGcaaattaaagccttcgagcgtcccaaaaccttctcaagcaaggttttcagtataatgttacatgcgtacacgcgtctgtacagaaaaaaaagaaaaatttgaaatataaataacgttcttaatactaacataactataaaaaaataaatagggacctagacttcaggttgtctaactccttccttttcggttagagcggatgtggggggagggcgtgaatgtaagcgtgacataactaatCTAAAATTCCCGGGATCCGCTGTACGCGGACCCACTTTCACATTTAAGTTGTTTTTCTAATCCGCATATGATCAATTCAAGGCCGAATAAGAAGGCTGGCTCTGCACCTTGGTGATCAAATAATTCGATAGCTTGTCGTAATAATGGCGGCATACTATCAGTAGTAGGTGTTTCCCTTTCTTCTTTAGCGACTTGATGCTCTTGATCTTCCAATACGCAACCTAAAGTAAAATGCCCCACAGCGCTGAGTGCATATAATGCATTCTCTAGTGAAAAACCTTGTTGGCATAAAAAGGCTAATTGATTTTCGAGAGTTTCATACTGTTTTTCTGTAGGCCGTGTACCTAAATGTACTTTTGCTCCATCGCGATGACTTAGTAAAGCACATCTAAAACTTTTAGCGTTATTGCGTAAAAAATCTTGCCAGCTTTCCCCTTCTAAAGGGCAAAAGTGAGTATGGTGCCTATCTAACATTTTAATAAGTTGATTGTATGCTTGGTATAGCTTGAAATATTGTGCAGAAAAAGAAACAAGGAAGAAAGGGAACGAGAACAATGACGAGGAAACAAAAGATTAATAATTGCAGGTCTATTTATACTTGATAGCAAGACAGCAAACTTTTTTTTATTTCAAATTCAAGTAACTGGAAGGAAGGCCGTATACCGTTGCTCATTAGAGAGTAGTGTGCGTGAATGAAGGAAGGAAAAAGTTTCGTGTGCTTCGAGATACCCCTCATCAGCTCTGGAACAACGACATCTGTTGGTGCTGTCTTTGTCGTTAATTTTTTCCTTTAGTGTCTTCCATCATTTTTTTGTCATTGCGGATATGGTGAGACAACAACGGGGGAGAGAGAAAAGAAAAAAAAAGAAAAGAAGTTGtaaacccacaccgggtgtcataatcaaccaatcgtaacttcatctcttccacccatgtctctttgagcaataaagccgataacaaaatctttgtcgctcttcgcaatgtcaacagtacccttagtatattctccagtagatagggagcccttgcatgacaattctgctaacatcaaaaggcctctaggttcctttgttacttcttctgccgcctgcttcaaaccgctaacaatacctggTccACTAGTCCCGGGAGCAAGATCAAGATGTTTTCACCGATCTTTCCGGTCTCTTTGGCCGGGGTTTACGGACGATGGCAGAAGACCAAAGCGCCAGTTCATTTGGCGAGCGTTGGTTGGTGGATCAAGCCCACGCGTAGGCAATCCTCGCAGATCTCGAACCATGTAATTTCCGAATACGGTAATTACACGCATCGAGCAGATCCGCCAGGCGTGTATATATAGCGTGGATGGCCAGGCAACTTTAGTGCTGACACATACAGGCATATATATATGTGTGCGACGACACATGATCATATGGCATGCATGTGCTCTGTATGTATATAAAACTCTTGTTTTCTTCTTTTCTCTAAATATTCTTTCCTTATACATTAGGACCTTTGCAGCATAAATTACTATACTTCTATAGACACACAAACACAAATACACACACTAAAaagctt

yG_MATx1 :

AAGCTTGGATTCTCACAATCCTGTCGGTCACTTCTCGGCTGTTCGCGTATATTTTTTGTTGATACTTTTACCGGTATTTTGTCTGTAATTTATTCTCTATCACTGATAGGGACTTCTCTATCACTGATAGGGAACCCAGCCTGATTTATACTATTAGGGATCGCAGGAAGGCGGTGGGAAGTCCGGGAGTCGCTGAGGGGAAGTGTCAGTGGTTTTGGGTATAAATGGCTGGTTGTTCCCTATCAGTAATAGAGAATTCCCTATCAGTGATAGAGACTGCGGATTTAGAAACTACCTGATAAAAGTATCAACAAAAATTGCGCATGCCGGCCTGGATTTTGCGCAAATTTACCTTAACGTCCCACAATATGTTTACTTCGAAGCCTGCTTTCAAAATTAAGAACAAAGCATCCAAATCATACAGAAACACAGCGGTTTCAAAAAAGCTGAAAGAAAAACGTCTAGCTGAGCATGTGAGGCCAAGCTGCTTCAATATTATTCGACCACTCAAGAAAGATATCCAGATTCCTGTTCCTTCCTCTCGATTTTTAAATAAAATCCAAATTCACAGGATAGCGTCTGGAAGTCAAAATACTCAGTTTCGACAGTTCAATAAGACATCTATAAAATCTTCAAAGAAATATTTAAACTCATTTATGGCTTTTAGAGCATATTACTCACAGTTTGGCTCCGGTGTAAAACAAAATGTCTTGTCTTCTCTGCTCGCTGAAGAATGGCACGCGGACAAAATGCAGCACGGAATATGGGACTACTTCGCGCAACAGTATAATTTTATAAACCCTGGTTTTGGTTTTGTAGAGTGGTTGACGAATAATTATGCTGAAGTACGTGGTGACGGATATTGGGAAGATGTGTTTGTACATTTGGCCTTATAGAGTGTGGTCGTGGCGGAGGTTGTTTATCTTTCGAGTACTGAATGTTGTCAGTATAGCTATCCTATTTGAAACTCCCCATCGTCTTGCTGCAG

yG_MATx2 :

CTGCAGAGTAGTGTCTGAGGTACAAACATCTTAGTAGTGTCGAGAGGGTTGATTGTTTATGTATTTTTGCGAAATATATATATATATATTCTACACAGATATATACATATTTGTTTTTCGGGCTCATTCTTTCTTCTTTGCCAGAGGCTCACCGCTCAAGAGGTCCGCTAATTCTGGAGCGATTGTTATTGTTTTTTCTTTTCTTCTTCTATTCGAAACCCAGTTTTTGATTTGAATGCGAGATAAACTGGTATTCTTCATTAGATTCTCTAGGCCCTTGGTATCTAGATATGGGTTCTCGATGTTCTTTGCAAACCAACTTTCTAGTATTCGGACATTTTCTTTTGTAAACCGGTGTCCTCTGTAAGGTTTAGTACTTTTGTTTATCATATCTTGAGTTACCACATTAAATACCAACCCATCCGCCGATTTATTTTTCTGTGTAAGTTGATAATTACTTCTATCGTTTTCTATGCTGCGCATTTCTTTGAGTAATACAGTAATGGTAGTAGTGAGTTGAGATGTTGTTTGCAACAACTTCTTCTCCTCATCACTAATCTTACGGTTTTTGTTGGCCCTAGATAAGAATCCTAATATATCCCTTAATTCAACTTCTTCTTCTGTTGTTACACTCTCTGGTAACTTAGGTAAATTACAGCAAATAGAAAAGAGCTTTTTATTTATGTCTAGTATGCTGGATTTAAACTCATCTGTGATTTGTGGATTTAAAAGGTCTTTAATGGGTATTTTATTCATTTTTTCTTAGTGTGTGTATTTGTATTTGCGTGTCTATAGAAGTATAGTAATTTATGCTGCAAAGGTCCTAATGTATAAGGAAAAAAAATTTAGAGAAAAAAAGAAAAAAAGAGTTTTATATACATACAGAGCACATACATGCCATATAATCATGTATATACGCGCACATATATATATGCCTGTATGTGTCAGCACTAAATTTACCTGAACATACGCGCTATATATACGCGCCTCGCGTATATGCTCGAGGATTCCCTACGCGTGGGCTTTTTTTACTAACCAACGCGCGCGAAATActagt

Appendix

Personnel

Hynek Kasl - Responsible person

Anna Sosnová - Experimental assistance

Václav Pelíšek - Experimental assistance

Tereza Puchrová - Scientific advisor

Useful Links

Protocols page:

Protocols

Old Links

See following pages for detailed information about constructing the synthetic haploids:

References

  1. Hualin Zhong, Ron McCord, and Andrew K. Vershon. Identification of target sites of the alpha2-Mcm1 repressor complex in the yeast genome. doi: 10.1101/gr.9.11.1040 Genome Res. 1999. 9: 1040-1047 Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press