Difference between revisions of "Team:KU Leuven/Research/Methods"
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<p> N-acyl homoserine lactones (AHL) are small diffusible molecules used for bacterial cell-to-cell signaling in Gram-negative bacteria. <i>Chromobacterium violaceum</i> is a Gram-negative bacteria which produces the violet pigment violacein as a result of sensing AHL. AHL is produced by the autoinducer synthase CviI and released in the environment. When a quorum has been reached, the AHL diffuses back into the bacteria and binds to the transcriptional regulator CviR. This activates the expression of specific genes which lead to violacein. </p> | <p> N-acyl homoserine lactones (AHL) are small diffusible molecules used for bacterial cell-to-cell signaling in Gram-negative bacteria. <i>Chromobacterium violaceum</i> is a Gram-negative bacteria which produces the violet pigment violacein as a result of sensing AHL. AHL is produced by the autoinducer synthase CviI and released in the environment. When a quorum has been reached, the AHL diffuses back into the bacteria and binds to the transcriptional regulator CviR. This activates the expression of specific genes which lead to violacein. </p> | ||
<p>In our project, the mutant <i>C. violaceum</i> CV026 is used to quantify the amount of OHHL, a specific type of AHL which is produced by luxI. This strain is deficient CviI and therefore requires exogenous addition of AHL to produce violacein. The idea is to achieve a standard curve where the <i>C. violaceum</i> CV026 is induced with different amounts of AHL. In this standard curve we also take into account how long we grow the bacteria and make a correction for the optical density. In the end, we obtained an absorbance value divided by the optical density.</p> | <p>In our project, the mutant <i>C. violaceum</i> CV026 is used to quantify the amount of OHHL, a specific type of AHL which is produced by luxI. This strain is deficient CviI and therefore requires exogenous addition of AHL to produce violacein. The idea is to achieve a standard curve where the <i>C. violaceum</i> CV026 is induced with different amounts of AHL. In this standard curve we also take into account how long we grow the bacteria and make a correction for the optical density. In the end, we obtained an absorbance value divided by the optical density.</p> | ||
− | <p>To begin quantifying the samples, the samples are grown until a certain optical density. Then the cells are spun down whereafter the <i>C. violaceum</i> CV026 is added. After incubating them for several hours, the <i>C. violaceum</i> CV026 and violacein are spun down and the supernatant is removed. The pellet is resuspended in dimethyl sulfoxide whereafter the cells are spun down. Because the violacein prefers to solve in dimethyl sulfoxide, we used the | + | <p>To begin quantifying the samples, the samples are grown until a certain optical density. Then the cells are spun down whereafter the <i>C. violaceum</i> CV026 is added. After incubating them for several hours, the <i>C. violaceum</i> CV026 and violacein are spun down and the supernatant is removed. The pellet is resuspended in dimethyl sulfoxide whereafter the cells are spun down. Because the violacein prefers to solve in dimethyl sulfoxide, we used the supernatants to measure the absorbance at 585 nm.</p> |
<p><b>Protocol</b></p> | <p><b>Protocol</b></p> | ||
<p><u>Make a standard curve</u><br><br> | <p><u>Make a standard curve</u><br><br> | ||
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<dd>1. Incubate <i>Chromobacterium violaceum</i> CV026 for 16-18h.</dd> | <dd>1. Incubate <i>Chromobacterium violaceum</i> CV026 for 16-18h.</dd> | ||
<dd>2. Take 1 mL of the sample that you would like to quantify. Measure the OD(600 nm) and centrifuge till the cells are down (max speed 15000 rpm, 10 min). If you want to include the amount of AHL inside the cell, you should lyse the cells in advance.</dd> | <dd>2. Take 1 mL of the sample that you would like to quantify. Measure the OD(600 nm) and centrifuge till the cells are down (max speed 15000 rpm, 10 min). If you want to include the amount of AHL inside the cell, you should lyse the cells in advance.</dd> | ||
− | <dd>3. Inoculate the <i>C. violaceum</i> CV026 to OD(600 nm) = 0.1 in air-lid culture tubes containing LB and LB supplemented with 1 mL | + | <dd>3. Inoculate the <i>C. violaceum</i> CV026 to OD(600 nm) = 0.1 in air-lid culture tubes containing LB and LB supplemented with 1 mL supernatants of your sample at 27°C (150 rev/min agitation) for 24 h in a shaking incubator. </dd> |
</dl> | </dl> | ||
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<p><b>Protocol</b></p> | <p><b>Protocol</b></p> | ||
<dl> | <dl> | ||
− | <dd>A mixture (40 µL) consisting of leucine (0 - 100 µM), 1 mM ATP, 10 mM KCl, 5 mM MgCl< | + | <dd>A mixture (40 µL) consisting of leucine (0 - 100 µM), 1 mM ATP, 10 mM KCl, 5 mM MgCl<sub>2</sub> and human leucyl-tRNA synthetase (6.25 μg/mL) (Abcam) is made in 15 mM HEPES-NaOH (pH 8.0). This mixture is heated at 80 degrees for 45 min on a heating block (shaking at 300 rpm).</dd> |
− | <dd>After cooling on ice, the second reaction mixture (10 µL) is added. It contains 2.5 mM sodium pyruvate, 5.0 mM MgCl< | + | <dd>After cooling on ice, the second reaction mixture (10 µL) is added. It contains 2.5 mM sodium pyruvate, 5.0 mM MgCl<sub>2</sub>, 300 μM thiamine pyrophosphate, 0.08 μM FAD, 0.5 unit/mL inorganic pyrophosphatase (from yeast, Thermo Scientific) and 20 units/mL pyruvate oxidase (from <i>Aerococcus sp.</i>, Sigma) in 50 mM HEPES-NaOH (pH 6.8).</dd> |
<dd>The next step is to spin this mixture down for 30 seconds at 8000 rpm. It is heated at 40 degrees for 30 min on a heating block (600 rpm). After spinning down at 8000 rpm for 30 seconds, the solution is added to a white 96-well plate.</dd> | <dd>The next step is to spin this mixture down for 30 seconds at 8000 rpm. It is heated at 40 degrees for 30 min on a heating block (600 rpm). After spinning down at 8000 rpm for 30 seconds, the solution is added to a white 96-well plate.</dd> | ||
− | <dd>A solution (100 µL) containing 60 μM luminol and 5.0 unit/mL horseradish peroxidase (Feinbiochemica Heidelberg) in 800 mM carbonate (NaHCO< | + | <dd>A solution (100 µL) containing 60 μM luminol and 5.0 unit/mL horseradish peroxidase (Feinbiochemica Heidelberg) in 800 mM carbonate (NaHCO<sub>3</sub>-NaOH) buffer (pH 9.0) is added. Finally, the microplate reader (BioTek SynergyMx) detected the luminescence for 3 seconds at 427-429 nm.</dd> |
</dl> | </dl> |
Revision as of 13:16, 18 September 2015
Methods
On this page you can find all of the methods and protocols used in the lab to obtain our results. For some techniques, we included some basic theory, since it is a prerequisite to get acquainted with the theory behind these techniques before using them. To learn more about them, click the titles below!
Contact
Address: Celestijnenlaan 200G room 00.08 - 3001 Heverlee
Telephone: +32(0)16 32 73 19
Email: igem@chem.kuleuven.be