BISC 219/F10: RNAi Lab 8

Lab 8: Series 3- Reverse Genetics-Plasmid Isolation and Transformation
Last week, you selected a colony of bacteria that contains a plasmid with a specific C. elegans gene you will RNAi. Now you know you have a colony of TOP10 strain E. coli bacteria that contains, not just any pL4440 vector plasmid but a copy of pL4440+your C. elegans gene of interest. Now we can isolate the plasmid DNA from these cells and transform these plasmids into a different special genetically strain of E. coli, HT115(DE3). We will use this strain for two reasons: we can induce the HT115(DE3) strain to overexpress the pL4440 plasmid genes (resulting in the presence of a lot of double stranded RNA specific to our gene of interest in these bacteria) and because a freshly transformed culture seems to work much better for eventual knockdown of gene expression by dsRNA interference. There is a lot scientists don't yet know about the mechanism of dsRNA interference. One thing we do know is that RNAi knockdown works better when you use freshly transformed HT115(DE3) feeding bacteria that can be manipulated to overexpress plasmid genes of interest, so that's what we'll do. Yesterday you inoculated a few milliliters of LB broth containing TOP10 E. coli (supplier: Invitrogen)bacteria that we are sure have maintained our genetically engineered plasmid, pL4440, modified to contain an antibiotic resistance gene to ampicillin and all or part of a C. elegans gene that you want to investigate. You added ampicillin to the broth to ensure that the plasmid DNA would be maintained by the cells. Overnight the bacteria have grown to high density and the plasmid DNA has undergone many replications. However since you started with a single colony of bacteria and that colony grew from a single transformed cell, all the copies of the plasmid DNA in your overnight culture should be identical (“clones” of one another). To isolate the plasmid DNA from this non-inducible bacterial strain, you will perform what is commonly called a “mini-prep”. This term distinguishes the procedure from a “maxi-” or “large scale-prep” which involves a larger volume of cells and additional steps of purification. The overall goal of each “prep” is the same--to separate the plasmid DNA from the chromosomal DNA so that certain genes on the plasmid DNA can be studied further. TO DO TODAY: To isolate plasmid DNA from an overnight culture of cells, the media is removed from the cells by centrifugation. The cells are resuspended in “Solution I” which contains Tris to buffer the cells and EDTA to bind divalent cations in the lipid bilayer, thereby weakening the cell envelope. Upon the addition of “Solution II,” the chromosomal DNA and the plasmid DNA are denatured by the sodium hydroxide, and the cellular proteins and lipids are dissolved by the detergent, sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS). The pH of the solution is returned to neutral by the potassium acetate in “Solution III.” At neutral pH the SDS precipitates from solution, carrying with it the dissolved proteins and lipids. In addition, the DNA strands renature at neutral pH. The chromosomal DNA, which is much longer than the plasmid DNA, renatures as a tangle that gets trapped in the SDS precipitate. The plasmid DNA renatures normally and stays in a water based solution. In this way the plasmid DNA is separated from the chromosomal DNA, the proteins and the lipids of the cell. Plasmid DNA can be precipitated out of solution in absolute ethanol and then put back into solution (in an appropriate concentration) in water. The ingredients and concentrations of a stock solution of all reagents (such as Solutions I, II, and III) can be found in the Media Recipes section of this section of the wiki. Today you will transform the isolated plasmid DNA, pL4440, into an IPTG inducible strain of E. coli, HT115(DE3), and spread the transformed bacteria onto LB agar media supplemented with ampicillin (resistance conferred by a gene expressed from the plasmid).

Protocols
Part 1: Plasmid DNA Isolation: Only one of your two overnight cultures should appear cloudy with bacterial growth. If your control is cloudy, please inform your instructor. (You can find the ingredients and concentrations for ingredients of Solutions I, II, and III in the Media and Recipes in this wiki.)


 * 1) To start the plasmid DNA isolation, label 2 microfuge tubes with pL4440+bli-1 (our plasmid vector name + our C. elegans gene), plus your initials and team color.
 * 2) Check to be sure that your cells have not settled. If they have, mix the cultures but do NOT invert them because they will leak. Then pour some of the overnight culture so that both microfuge tubes are almost full. If you are nervous about pouring the bacteria, you can pipet 750 microliters into each tube twice, so that there is a total of 1.5 ml in each tube. The exact volume doesn’t matter but the tubes should be quite full when you close the cap.
 * 3) Place the tubes in the room temperature microfuge so that the hinges of each cap is facing out. Paying attention to this small detail will help you know where in the tube to find your pellets. While it is not essential to do this in this step, it is a good habit to get into since sometimes pellets are very small and hard to see. Be sure your tubes are balanced, then spin the tubes for two minutes at 8,000 rpm. Check the rcf speed of the centrifuge while it is spinning (by hitting the toggle that changes the readout) and record the rcf’s in your lab notebook. Relative centrifugal force (rcf) is what should be used in M&M to describe your speed since it is universal and rpm is rotor and centrifuge dependent.
 * 4) If the supernatant is clear, pour it into the waste beaker that is on your bench, then flick the tube with the cap open to remove the last few drops of liquid. The cell pellet will not fall out. If the supernatant is not clear, recentrifuge until it is.
 * 5) Resuspend your cell pellets COMPLETELY in 100 microliters of solution I. Pipet up and down until ALL of the cells are uniformly suspended in Solution I. Be sure to change tips between samples. Leave the cells at room temperature as you prepare solution II.
 * 6) To make solution II, mix 500 microliters of 2% SDS with 500 microliters of 0.4M NaOH in a microfuge tube. Close the cap and invert the tube several times to mix the contents. Add 200 microliters of solution II to each miniprep and invert the tubes five or six times to mix. In some cases the minipreps may appear to "clear" but don't worry if you don't see a big change in yours. Place the tubes on ice for five minutes.
 * 7) Add 150 microliters of solution III to each miniprep and immediately vortex each tube for 10 seconds with your vortex set at the highest setting. White clumps should appear in the solution after you vortex it. Place the tubes in the room temperature microfuge and spin for 3 minutes at the HIGHEST speed.
 * 8) While the minipreps are spinning, label another set of microfuge tubes with the name of the plasmid (pL4440+C. elegans gene name)and your initials or team color. The new tubes can be left at room temperature.
 * 9) A white pellet should be visible when you remove your minipreps from the microfuge. Use your P1000 to transfer 400 microliters of each supernatant to the appropriate clean microfuge tube. It's OK to leave some of the supernatant behind. Try to avoid transferring the white pellet.
 * 10) Add 1 ml of room temperature 100% ethanol to each new tube. The tubes will be quite full. Close the caps and invert the tubes at least five times to thoroughly mix the contents.
 * 11) Spin the tubes in the room temperature microfuge for 2 minutes at HIGHEST speed. It is important to orient your tubes so that the hinges are up this time, as the pellets are expected to be barely visible.
 * 12) Pour off the supernatants into the waste beaker on your bench then flick out the last few drops. The tubes do not have to be completely dry.
 * 13) Carefully, wash the pellets with 500 microliters of 80% ethanol. (You may need to make a few mls of 80% ETOH from the 100% ethanol stock provided). When you wash the pellets, add the 80% ethanol slowly and carefully, so that the liquid flows down the side of the tube away from the pellet. After the ethanol has been dispensed, immediately remove it with the same tip, making sure to keep the tip on the side of the tube that doesn't have your pellet. Some liquid will remain in the tube, and it can and must be removed using your P200, set to 100 microliters. Try to remove as much of the ethanol as you can (without removing your pellet!). The pelleted DNA will have to be completely dry before you add water or your DNA will not go into solution.
 * 14) After all the DNA pellets have been washed, put your tubes with their caps open in the SpeedVac that is at the back of the lab. If you were able to remove most of the ethanol with the P200, then after two or three minutes the last drops of ethanol will have evaporated and the pellet will be barely visible. If the DNA pellet is invisible please see your instructor to determine how much water to use in the next step.
 * 15) If you have a visible pellet of DNA, add 30 microliters of sterile water to each tube and vortex each tube enough for all of the DNA to be off the wall of the tube and into solution. The pelleted plasmid DNA must dissolve completely in the water. The liquid can be brought back to the bottom of the tubes by spinning for a few seconds in the microfuge. You can then combine the dissolved plasmid DNA into one of the two tubes so that you have approximately 60 microliters of plasmid DNA as one aliquot. Store the DNA on ice until you are ready to use part of it and then give the rest to your instructor to freeze. DO NOT DISCARD ANY OF YOUR PLASMID ISOLATE!

Part 2: Transformation of isolated plasmid DNA into HT115(DE3): The competent HT115(DE3) bacterial cells are on the instructor’s bench You will transform some of your plasmid DNA into these bacteria. The cells are very fragile, so treat them gently. The prep staff prepared these competent HT115(DE3) cells for you using the Inoue Method [[Media:Inoue bacterial transformation.doc]]. Reference: Inoue H., Nojima H., and Okayama H. 1990. High efficiency transformation of Escherichia coli with plasmids. Gene 96: 23-28. The cells were made competent to take up free plasmid DNA by this treatment. This treatment makes the cell wall and membrane more permeable and our transformation efficiency much greater but it weakens the cells; therefore you must keep them cold and mix them gently throughout the transformation (no vortexing!). What would it mean if you had no colonies on your plate? Normally, you would expect to have around 100 pale color colonies on each plate. If you have at least one well isolated colony on the plate, you’re all set. After the 24 hour growth period the plate should be placed in the rack in the refrigerator labeled with your lab day. You will use a single colony from the plate to make an overnight broth culture on the day before next lab. If you have no colonies on one or more of your plates, please notify your instructor right away. Before leaving lab today, give the rest of your isolated plasmid DNA to your instructor in a labeled microfuge tube. Make sure your tube is labeled with your name, lab day, plasmid name and color coded with a piece of tape in your team color.
 * 1) Obtain a tube containing 50 ul of competent cells from your instructor.
 * 2) Label the top or the side of the tube with HT115(DE3), pL4440+bli-1, and your initials or team color.
 * 3) Start the transformations by pipetting 3 microliters of your plasmid DNA to the tube. Pipet up and down once to mix the DNA and the cells. Close the cap and let the transformation mixture sit  on ice for 10 minutes.
 * 4) Heat shock by incubating the transformation mix at 42°C for 90 seconds, exactly. This step must be timed exactly. Remove the tubes at the end of 90 seconds to your ice bucket while you get your LB ready.
 * 5) Pour 3 mls LB from the stock bottle into a clean and sterile 15 ml conical tube. By doing this, you will minimize the amount of LB that will be contaminated if you accidentally touch the media with something that is not sterile. Contaminated media looks cloudy, so be sure to swirl and examine the stock bottle of LB to make sure it is not contaminated.
 * 6) Add 500 microliters of the LB in your conical tube to the transformation mix. When pipetting the media, remember to release your thumb on your micropipet slowly, to avoid splashing the liquid on the end of the barrel. The barrel is not sterile and if you see the liquid touch it, then discard the media in the waste beaker and try again with a new tip.
 * 7) Once you have added the media, close the cap and invert the tube once or twice to mix the contents. Incubate at 37°C for 30-45 minutes.
 * 8) While the plasmid DNA is being taken up by the competent cells and the new genes provided by the plasmid are being expressed by the bacteria, label two LB + amp agar plates. Label the bottom of the plated with the strain's identity (HT115(DE3)), the plasmid used, the date, your initials and team color. You must label the bottom of the plated since the tops are easily switched. Differentiate them by putting 50μL on one and between 100-150μL on the other. If you had invisible pellets, you should use the larger volume on one of the plates. Put these plates in the hood with the blower on and with the lid ajar to dry the surface of the agar for about 10 minutes or until the surface looks dry but is not badly dehydrated.
 * 9) Once the transformation mix has incubated at 37°C for 30-45 minutes, invert it to mix the contents and pipet 50 microliters of transformed cells onto the center of the labeled slightly dehydrated LB plate prepared in the previous step. Pipet anywhere from 100 to 150μL on the other plate. Pour 5-10 glass beads onto the plates. Put the lid back on and gently swirl the beads all over the plates to spread the transformed bacteria around.  When you are done - pour the beads into the beaker with disinfectant near the sink.
 * 10) Replace the lids and leave the agar plates undisturbed for a few minutes.
 * 11) Once they have dried enough that the surface doesn’t appear wet, invert the plates and incubate them at 37°C for 24-48 hours. The plates should be incubated with the agar side up so that condensation will not drip onto the surface of the agar and smear the colonies that will be growing there.
 * 12) Save the remaining transformation mix for 24 hours or until we are sure that there is at least one colony growing on each of your plates.

To do on the day before the next lab: You and your partner will return to the lab to make an overnight broth culture of your selected colony as described below. This process will create a sub-culture of many identical copies of the plasmid carrying the construct to RNAi the gene that you want to study.
 * 1) Find your plate in the glass front refrigerator in a rack labeled with your lab day. After agreeing upon an appropriate colony, start your overnight culture. At this point, ALL of your colonies should contain your plasmid of interest.
 * 2) Begin by pouring (DO NOT PUT A PIPET INTO THE STOCK LB!!) 10 ml of sterile LB broth from one of the stock containers in the refrigerator into a sterile orange-capped 15ml conical tube. You will use the volumetric marks on the tube for measuring the media rather than using a pipet. Make sure the LB stock does not look cloudy (indicating contamination by a previous user) and take care not to contaminate it yourself.
 * 3) Add 10 microliters of the 50mg/ml ampicillin stock (also found in the refrigerator). Calculate the effective concentration of ampicillin that you will have in your LB tube (remember V1 x C1= V2 x C2) and record that information in your lab notebook.
 * 4) Replace the cap of your LB +amp broth and invert the tube several times to mix the contents.
 * 5) Label two sterile glass culture tubes (found in a rack in the lab) with tape in your team color. Label one with "pL4440 and the gene name" and your initials. Label the other with your initials only.
 * 6) Using a 5 or 10 ml sterile disposable pipet, pipet 4 ml of your working solution of LB+ampicillin broth into each of the 2 tubes. Be careful not to touch the tip to anything non-sterile.
 * 7) Inoculate the broth with your bacteria by using a sterile toothpick to scrape your candidate colony off the plate. Be sure not to touch the plate with the toothpick except on the desired colony and don’t pick up any satellite colonies. Make sure the toothpick falls into the sterile broth. The second tube of broth labeled with just your initials is a control and should not be inoculated with bacteria as it is your control for contamination.
 * 8) Balance the 2 tubes across from each other on the rotating wheel in the incubator at the front of the room when you come in the door and incubate them at 37°C overnight. Do not forget to make sure the wheel is rotating when you leave!

Outline of Experimental Design for REVERSE Genetics Project
Where are you now in this process?(What have you done so far; What's next?) Make the feeder strain of bacteria Plate wild type C. elegans worms (N2 and rrf-3 strains) on feeder plates made as described (containing bacteria expressing dsRNA of our gene of interest).  Observe phenotype change in progeny caused by RNAi silencing or knockdown of the gene of interest compared to control worms of same strains that were NOT fed feeder strain bacteria. Isolate RNA from RNAi worms and control worms of same strains. Perform RT-PCR (Reverse Transcriptase)to amplify the C. elegans gene of interest, using worm RNA and then cDNA as template. The RNA is isolated from treated RNAi worms and untreated worms of the same species. Visualize the worm gene of interst in the pcr product by agarose gel electrophoresis and compare the amount of amplified gene of interest in RNAi treated vs. untreated worms.
 * 1) Amplify gene of interest by pcr ;
 * 2) Restriction Enzyme digestion of amplified DNA to create "sticky ends" for ligation;
 * 3) Clean up DNA (remove enzymes); 
 * 4) Cloning: ligate gene into vector plasmid with amp resistance gene ;
 * 5) Transform competent bacterial cells;
 * 6) Select for transformants on media with ampicillin;
 * 7) Perform colony pcr on several transformants to be sure to find one colony containing a vector plasmid with the gene of interst
 * 8) Culture the selected colony from colony pcr to create a lot of copies of these bacteria
 * 9) Isolate the cloned plasmid DNA from that cultured colony by miniprep;
 * 10) Retransform isolated plasmids (with gene interest) into HT115 (DE3)cells genetically modified to have impaired ability to degrade RNA;<BR>
 * 11) Select for transformants on media with ampicillin
 * 12) Choose an isolated colony to culture and make lots of feeder strain bacteria;
 * 13) Induce expression of C. elegans gene dsRNA from the pL4440 vector in the bacteria by IPTG induction.
 * 14) Seed NM lite worm growth media plates with feeder strain produced as described <BR>

Assignment
Remember to check the Assignment section of the wiki for instructions about the graded assignment due in the next lab and check the Weekly Calendar for other work to accomplish before the next lab.

Links to Labs& Project Info
Series1:<BR> Worm Info Lab 1: Worm Boot Camp & Sex-Linked or Autosomal Start<BR> Lab 2: Sex-Linked or Autosomal Finale Series2:<BR> Background: Classical Forward Genetics and Gene Mapping Lab 2: Mutant Hunt Lab 3: Linkage Test Part 1 Lab 4: Linkage Test Part 2, Mapping and Complementation Lab 5: Finish Complementation; Mapping Con't Lab 6: DNA sequence analysis; Mapping Con't<BR> Lab 7: Complete Mapping: Score Series3:<BR> Schedule of Reverse Genetics Project<BR> RNAi General Information Media Recipes Lab 5: Picking your gene to RNAi Lab 6: Cloning your gene of interest Lab 7: Picking your transformant Lab 8: Plasmid purification and transformation Lab 9: Induction of bacteria for RNAi Lab 10: Scoring your worms and RNA purification Lab 11: RT PCR reactions