OriC/ter ratio determination

Curators
 Torsten Waldminghaus

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Abstract
This protocol describes how one can determine the ratio of the origin of replication, oriC, to the terminus of replication, ter, in Escherichia coli. That is for example important for cell cycle analysis. To get the ratio one could use Southern Blot and quantification of the bands. However, this protocol describes the use of qPCR which is a bit faster.

Procedure

 * First you need to purify the DNA you want to analyse (see for example Chromosomal DNA isolation from E. coli).
 * To normalize the data for your sample you need chromosomal DNA from cells that are not replicating and have only complete chromosomes. Rifampicin treated cells are suitable since Rif stops replication initiation. The ongoing replications are finished and you end up with whole chromosomes after a while. How to get Rif cells you can find here: flow cytometry notes. It would be ideal to check your cells by flow cytometry (if they have no ongoing replication).
 * Digest 100ng of your DNA (sample and control) in 10μL volume with EcoRI for 30min at 37°C. Note: This is to make the following qPCR more accurate since PCR of entire chromosomes might give some unwanted bias.
 * add 90μL dH2O
 * use 10μL as template for 1 PCR reaction
 * for the qPCR use primers ter (for terminus) and 3921366 (for oriC). Details are here: User:Torsten_Waldminghaus/Primers.
 * Make primer mixes for each set of primers:


 * For each each primer set make a master mix corresponding to three parallels per primer set per DNA (includeing one or two extra for pipetting errors)
 * 1) 12.5μL TaqMan Mix
 * 2) 2.5μL primer mix (see table above)
 * pipett 15μL in wells on 96-well PCR plate
 * add 10μL DNA
 * spin down plate at 1000 rpm to collect sample on the bottom
 * run qPCR
 * calculate oriC/ter ratio normalized to the oriC/ter ratio of rif sample

Discussion
You can discuss this protocol.