IGEM:Paris Bettencourt 2012/Protocols/MAGEwoR

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MAGE without Robot or Making electrocompetent cells and transforming with ssDNA

Prepare bacterial cultures

  1. Inoculate EcNR2 strain from frozen glycerol stock or a single colony into 3 to 5 ml LB medium. Shake at 30° to 32°C overnight.
  2. Add ~0.5 ml of the overnight culture to 35 ml of LB medium in a 250-ml (baffled) Erlenmeyer flask.
  3. Place the flask in the 32°C shaking water bath and grow cells at 32°C with shaking for ~2 hr.
    The cells are ready when the A600 is between 0.4 and 0.6. It is important not to over-grow the cells, since stationary phase cells do not express the recombination functions well.

Induce recombination functions

  1. Transfer half the culture to a 125-ml (baffled) Erlenmeyer flask and place that flask in the 42°C water bath. Shake 15 min at 220 rpm to induce. Leave the remainder of the culture at 32°C; this will be used as the uninduced control that lacks recombination activity. While the cells are inducing, fill an ice bucket with an ice-water slurry.
  2. Immediately after inducing for 15 min at 42°C, rapidly cool the flask in the icewater slurry with gentle swirling. Leave on ice for ≥5 min. Follow the same cooling protocol with the uninduced 32°C culture. While the cells are on ice, precool the centrifuge to 4°C and chill the necessary number of 35- to 50-ml plastic centrifuge tubes, labeled for induced and uninduced cells.

Make electrocompetent cells

  1. Transfer both the induced and uninduced cultures to the appropriately labeled chilled 35- to 50-ml centrifuge tubes. Centrifuge 7 min at 4600g (6700 rpm in a Sorvall SA-600 rotor), 4°C. Aspirate or pour off supernatant.
  2. Add 1 ml ice-cold distilled water to the cell pellet in the bottom of each tube and gently resuspend cells with a large pipet tip (do not vortex). Add another 30 ml ice-cold distilled water to each tube, seal, and gently invert to mix, again without vortexing. Centrifuge tubes again as in last step
    All subsequent resuspensions of cells should be done gently and without vortexing. Preparation of the cells for electroporation washes out any added chemical inducing agent.
  3. Decant the 30-ml supernatant very carefully from the soft pellet in each tube and resuspend each cell pellet in 1 ml ice-cold distilled water.
    Remove tubes from the centrifuge promptly. The pellet is very soft and care should be taken not to dislodge it, especially when processing multiple tubes.
  4. Transfer resuspended cells to microcentrifuge tubes. Microcentrifuge 30 to 60 sec at maximum speed, 4°C. Carefully aspirate supernatant. In each of the tubes, resuspend the cell pellet in 200 μl cold distilled water, which will provide enough material for four or five electroporations.
    Electrocompetent cells can be stored at −80°C after resuspending the cell pellet in 15% (v/v) glycerol. For highest efficiency, use freshly processed cells.

Introduce DNA by electroporation

  1. Chill the desired number of 0.1-cm electroporation cuvettes on ice. Turn on the electroporator and set to 1.80 kV.
  2. In microcentrifuge tubes on ice, 100 ng of single-stranded oligonucleotide with 50 to 100 μl of the suspension of induced or uninduced cells. Do the mixing and subsequent electroporation rapidly; do not leave the DNA-cell mixes on ice for extended periods. Be sure to include the following electroporation reactions and controls:
    1. Induced cells plus DNA.
      This is the culture that should yield the designed recombinants.
    2. Induced cells without DNA.
      This is a control to identify contamination, determine the reversion frequency, and obtain some idea of the efficiency of the selection.
    3. Uninduced cells plus DNA.
      This control tells whether there is some contaminating factor in the DNA that is contributing to the selected colonies.
  3. Introduce the DNA into the cells by electroporation.
    The time constant should be greater than 5 msec for optimal results. Low time constants indicate problems with the cells, the DNA, or even the equipment.
  4. Immediately after electroporation, add 1 ml LB medium to the cuvette using a micropipettor with a 1000-μl pipet tip. Transfer the electroporation mix to sterile culture tubes and incubate the tubes with shaking at 30° to 34°C for 30min to 2 hr

Determine cell titers

  1. Make serial 1:10 dilutions of the electroporation mix through 10^−6 using M9medium or 1× TM buffer, dispensing 0.9 ml M9 or TM and 0.1 ml of the cell suspension per tube.
    The dilutions can be made in rich medium if a selection for antibiotic resistance is applied.
  2. To determine total viable cell count, spread 100 μl of 10^−5 and 10^−6 dilutions on LB plates (rich plates without drug). Incubate the plates at 30° to 34°C for 1 to 2 days.
  3. To determine recombinant cell count, plate cells on selective plates as follows depending on the anticipated recombinant frequency.
    1. If efficient recombination is expected, spread both 10 and 100 μl of the 10^−1 and 10^−2 dilutions.
    2. If low numbers of recombinants are expected, spread 100 μl each of a 1:5 and 1:10 dilution.
    3. For the no-DNA and uninduced controls, plate 200 μl directly on selective plates.
  4. Incubate plates at the appropriate temperature (30° to 34°C).
    At 30°C, colonies may take two days to come up on LB plates.
  5. Candidates should be purified by streaking for single colonies and retested for the appropriate phenotype.