Team:MIT/Protocols


Protocols
C. Hutchinsonii Media

This is the media used for C. Hutch and co cultures with E. Coli. The media contains all the salts needed for both bacteria but not the carbon source (filter paper) due to the carbon source not being liquid. Cultures are made by adding the salt solution to a tube containing a piece of filter paper where the tube with the paper in it has been sterilized (usually by autoclave).

C Hutch ALONE in 1 L

Paper: 50 grams per liter of media, which is one 0.5g 9cm No. 1 filter paper disks per 100 mL.

Component Amount
KH2PO4 0.2 g
MgSO4*7H2O 0.5 g
KCl 0.5 g
NaNO3 0.5 g
FeSO4*7H2O 20 mg
K2HPO4 0.8 g
tryptone 1 g

Autoclave 15 min.

E Coli ALONE (M9) in 1 L

  1. Make 5x M9 salts
    • To make M9 Salts aliquot 800ml H2O and add
      • 64g Na2HPO4-7H2O
      • 15g KH2PO4
      • 2.5g NaCl
      • 5.0g NH4Cl
      • Stir until dissolved
      • Adjust to 1000ml with distilled H2O
      • Sterilize by autoclaving
  2. Measure ~700ml of distilled H2O (sterile)
  3. Add 200ml of M9 salts
  4. Add 2ml of 1M MgSO4 (sterile)
  5. Add 20 ml of 20% glucose (or other carbon source)
  6. Add 100ul of 1M CaCl2 (sterile)
  7. Adjust to 1000ml with distilled H2O
Stock Culture Preparation

C Hutch is slow to grow, so experiments will be much faster if large initial concentrations of C Hutch is used. This is achieved by having a continual stock of C Hutch in the incubator which is used to provide cells for experiments

Protocol:

Stripette:

  • 10ml of current stock
  • 90ml of DSM3T media
  • 5g of autoclaved filter paper strips

into a 500ml flask, and place in shaker.

Transformation
  1. Make sure that the incubator (30/37C) and heat block (42C) are ON.
    1. Put water in the wells of the 42°C heat block.
  2. Make sure required antibiotic plates are present.  Make sure you're using the right antibiotic plates for your plasmid's resistance!
    1. Warm plates to 37°C.  Cold plates reduce transformation efficiency by an order of magnitude.
    2. Also warm 500 µl SOC per transformation to room temperature (if it was in the refrigerator.)
  3. Take the DNA out of --20 freezer, let it thaw.
    1. Vortex DNA to mix, then spin down.  Make sure it is completely thawed out!
  4. Make sure that all of the required reagents/DNA etc are present at the site of transformation before you take the cells out of the -80.
  5. Thaw the competent cells on ice for 3-4 min.
    1. You want to add your DNA right as the last bit of cells' ice melts.  Even if it's still a little slushy, that's okay.
  6. Add 1-2 µl of DNA into the comp cells.  Stir with a pipette tip a few times, then put right back on ice.
    1. If you're transforming the result of a reaction (GG, LR, etc) add 1-2 µl of the reaction.  Don't add more: many of these reactions have additives that screws up transformation.
    2. If you're transforming plasmid DNA (from a miniprep), either (a) dilute it out so you add only ~10 ng of DNA, or (b) plate only 10 µl of the outgrowth – else you'll get a lawn!  Super-coiled DNA transforms super-efficiently. As an alternative, transform 1 ul of miniprep DNA and then streak the outgrowth instead of plating with beads.
    3. You can rescue DNA from an empty mini prep tube by gently pipetting the cells into the empty DNA tube, enough DNA will be stuck to the walls.
  7. Incubate the cells on ice for 30-40 min.
  8. Heat shock the cells for EXACTLY 30 sec at 42 C water bath.
  9. Place back on ice for 90 seconds.
  10. Add 250 ul of SOC (37° to RT) medium to each tube (S.O.C is made by dissolving 0.5 ml of 20% glucose in 25 ml of SOB. Make sure that the SOC is clear and not cloudy/ contaminated.)
  11. Shake the tubes at 37 C, 280 rpm for 60 min.
  12. Plate 100 µl for a reaction product, or 10 µl in a 100 µl puddle of water for a supercoiled plasmid.
  13. Incubate plates upside down overnight at 37 C or 16-18h at 30C.
    Can leave the cells in the incubator for up to 18 hours but no more.
Gel Preparation, Running, and Extraction

Preparing the Gel

  1. Check to see if there is a gel waiting in the fridge.
  2. Dissolve UltraPure agarose to a final concentration of 1%(by mass) in TAE buffer in a glass bottle.
  3. Heat the solution in the microwave with frequent stirring to dissolve the agarose homogenously. ~1 minute/200ml solution
  4. Let sit until cool enough to handle.
  5. Add 10 µl SYBRSafe (1:10000) per 100 ml of the solution and mix well.
  6. Pour 50ml* of solution per small gel tray. The gel trays and combs should be pre-cleaned with water and wiped dry.
    • Note for combs: 15-well combs hold about 6 ul liquid per well, 12-well combs hold about 15 ul per well, 8-well combs hold about 20 ul per well
      • Taping two 8-well comb wells together results in a well that holds up to 100 ul
      • Taping three 8-well comb wells together result in a well that holds up to 200 ul
  7. Use 120 ml per large gel tray. [need to update amounts]
    1. For the small set: small trays hold 20 ml, large trays hold 50 ml
  8. Wait for the gels to solidify. ~15 mins
  9. Label and store at 4C.

*Most of the iGEM gel trays are the small trays that fit 50ml of solution for making the gel.

Running the Gel

When doing gel extraction, it is important to run both an analytical gel (to view under UV) and an extraction gel (from which bands are excised). UV damages DNA, and so we dont want to expose our extracted DNA.

Analytical Gel:

The analytical gel should have between 20 and 100 ng of DNA in each well. It should be an exact copy of the extraction gel with respect to position, voltage, and run time.

Extraction Gel:

This should be the rest of the digestion(s).

The analytical and extraction gels can technically be part of the same physical gel. Make sure to separate with a razor blade before imaging.

Refer to Gel Prep protocol above to determine the amounts of liquid to load for the specific well.

Appropriate Hyperladder to be used for PCR product which is linear. Usually Hyperladder I will be used.

  1. While casting gel, add two sets of lanes; use one set to load an analytical gel. 
  2. Add 2ul gel loading buffer (Orange G 6X; it helps DNA sink into the bottom of the well) to DNA.
  3. Make sure there is enough 1xTAE in the plate holder.
  4. Load 5.0ul of appropriate hyperladder to one of the lanes.
  5. Load appropriate amount of DNA - As much as possible! Usually 15-18ul - (mixed with the buffer) in each well.
  6. Set the timer and voltage to 100V and 25 min.

Analytical Gel Annotation

The following things need to be added to the analytical gel image BEFORE it is posted to the wiki:

  • Label each lane with part number and amount of DNA loaded
  • Label each band with length and proposed identification
  • Include wt% agarose, run time, and voltage

Gel Extraction Protocol using Zymo kit (preferred if available)

  1. Place the extraction gel on the blue light table.
  2. Cut out the appropriate bands. Place into 2mL microtube(s). Try to cut out as small a piece as possible while still getting all the DNA.
  3. Weigh gel slice (tare with empty microtube). Add 3 volumes of ADB buffer per mg of gel (so a 100mg gel gets 300 uL of ADB buffer).
  4. Incubate at 55C for 10 minutes. Make sure that the gel is completely dissolved.
  5. Add dissolved gel solution to Zymo column in collection tube. Max volume is 800 uL at a time.
  6. Spin 14000 rpm for 30 sec.
  7. Discard liquid in collection tube.
  8. Repeat step 5-7 if had more than 800 uL dissolve gel.
  9. Add 200 uL DNA wash buffer.
  10. Spin 14000 rpm 30 seconds.
  11. Discard liquid in collection tube.
  12. Add 200 uL DNA wash buffer
  13. Spin 14000 rpm 1 min.
  14. Discard liquid in collection tube.
  15. Spin 14000 rpm 1 min one more time (dry spin).
  16. Discard collection tube (but not the column).
  17. (Optional: 2nd dry spin into clean collection tube.)
  18. Place column in a clean labeled microtube.
  19. Add 10 uL (min 6 uL for higher DNA concentration) of sterile DDH2O to top of column. Water should be pipetted directly onto center of filter.
  20. Incubate at RT 1 min (or longer).
  21. Spin 1 min at 14000 rpm. Discard the column.
  22. Measure the concentration on the nanodrop. (You may recover the 1uL from the nanodrop if needed.)

Gel Extraction Protocol using QIAquick Gel Extraction Kit:

  1. Cut the gel to separate analytical and extraction gel; place analytical gel in UV illuminator. 
  2. Look at the gel under low wavelength UV (high wavelengths will denature DNA). Quickly take a polaroid image and shut OFF the UV. 
  3. Cut extraction gel under white light; avoid UV illuminating the extraction gel as this drastically decreases the DNA yield. If necessary, stain with Methyl Blue. 
  4. Place the cut bands in 2ml Eppendorf tubes; Weigh slices; No more than 400mg per tube
  5. Add 3 volumes (6 volumes if you are afraid of getting a low yield) of Buffer QG to 1 volume of gel (100mg ~ 100ul)
  6. Incubate at 50C for 10min or until gel is dissolved; vortex every 2-3 min
  7. Confirm that color of mixture is yellow (if not, add 10ul of 3M NaAc, pH 5.0)
  8. Add 1 gel volume of isopropanol
  9. Add max of 770ul to QIAquick column and centrifuge for 1 min (max speed, ~13,000rpm, RT)
  10. Run flow-through over column one more time.
  11. After the second time, discard flow-through and place column back in tube.
  12. If needed, add rest of mixture to same tube (up to additional 770ul), spin, and discard flow-through
  13. Add 500uL of Buffer QG to column and centrifuge for 1 min (wash).
  14. Wash: add 0.75ml Buffer PE (make sure that the buffer has ethanol added to it) to column.  Let stand for 2-5 minutes and then centrifuge for 1 min
  15. Discard flow-through & centrifuge for 1 min
  16. Place column into clean Eppendorf tube
  17. Add 50ul Buffer EB or water to center of membrane.  Make sure to use warm EB (50C).  (Use 30uL if worried about low concentration.)
  18. Let stand at RT for 4 min
  19. Centrifuge for 1 min
  20. Measure the concentration using the UV spectrophotometer.
Pro Tips
  1. You don't need 2 lanes if you aren't putting your gel under UV light (the blue light and SYBR safe is fine)
  2. You can up the IPA to 1/4 of the total volume
  3. Warm EB (50 mL conical filled w/ water, plop the tube inside, put it in the heat block)
  4. Don't let it stand at room temperature, you can do it at 5 degrees (heat block)

Gel Extraction Protocol using QIAgen MinElute Kit:

  1. Cut the gel to separate analytical and extraction gel; place analytical gel in UV illuminator. 
  2. Look at the gel under low wavelength UV (high wavelengths will denature DNA). Quickly take a polaroid image and shut OFF the UV. 
  3. Cut extraction gel under white light; avoid UV illuminating the extraction gel as this drastically decreases the DNA yield. If necessary, stain with Methyl Blue. 
  4. Place the cut bands in 2ml Eppendorf tubes; Weigh slices; No more than 300mg per tube
  5. Add 3 volumes of Buffer QG to 1 volume of gel (100mg ~ 100ul)
  6. Incubate at 50C for 10min or until gel is dissolved; vortex every 2-3 min
  7. Confirm that color of mixture is yellow (if not, add 10ul of 3M NaAc, pH 5.0)
  8. Add 1 gel volume of isopropanol
  9. Add max of 800ul to MinElute column and centrifuge for 1 min (speed >= 10,000 G, RT)
  10. Discard flow-through and place column back in tube.
  11. If needed, add rest of mixture to same tube (up to additional 770ul), spin, and discard flow-through
  12. Add 500 uL of buffer QG and spin column for 1 min and discard flow-through
  13. Wash: add 0.75ml Buffer PE(make sure that the buffer has ethanol added to it) to column and centrifuge for 1 min
  14. Discard flow-through & centrifuge for 1 min
  15. Place column into clean Eppendorf tube
  16. Add 10ul Buffer EB (10 mM TrisCl,pH 8.5) or water to center of membrane
  17. Let stand at RT for 1 min
  18. Centrifuge for 1 min
  19. Measure the concentration using the UV spectrophotometer.
Golden Gate
50 ng of each piece of DNA being joined

Use nanodrop to find concentration in ng/ul, then divide 50 by that concentration to find the required volume of DNA: Conc: x ng/uL Vol: 50/x uL

NOTE: If GGDonr is too concentrated, dilute it with EB or water. NOTE: Ligase buffer does not like to be freeze-thawed, so use one-time-use aliquots.

x1 uL of DNA1 x2 uL of DNA2

y uL (100ng) Donor 2ul 10X T4 Ligase Buffer 2ul 10X BSA 1ul BsaI (enzyme) HC (high concentration) 1ul T4 Ligase (enzyme) HC (high concentration)


fill to 20uL with SDIH20 (put water in before the buffer and enzymes) ------------- 20ul total

(NOTE: Make sure that Buffer and Enzyme added last, enzyme after buffer)

Take a p20, set it to 10uL and then pipet up and down.


Example: Excel File

ADD
CONC.
VOLUME
ORDER
DNA1 c1 ng/ul x1 = 50/c1 ul (50ng) 2
... ... ... ...
DNAn cn ng/ul xn = 50/cn ul (50ng) 2
GGDonr d ng/ul y = 50/d ul (100ng) 2
10x T4 Ligase Buffer   2ul 3
10x BSA   2ul 3
BsaI (enzyme)   1ul 4
T4 Ligase (enzyme)   1ul 3
H20    20 - (x1 + ... + xn + y) ul 1
       
TOTAL   20ul  

THERMOCYCLER:

(Protocol EBGG)


37C for 5min

Part 1 50X: 37C for 2.5min 4C for 0.5min 16C for 5.5min

Part 2 37C for 10 min 80C for 20 min

4C hold (for 8+ hours)


(Check protocol by looking up the paper or other online GG protocols)