Bacterial Transformation - Research - My notes
Central Dogma: DNA (Transcription)→ RNA (Translation)→ Protein
GFP: Green Fluorescent Protein
found in Pacific Jellyfish(Aequorea victoria)
When excited by UV light/radiation the protein gives off a green light
applications:
genetic engineering includes the treatment of human genetic disease
production of transgenic crops
Transformation: Uptake of foreign DNA(often circular plasmid)
Transformation Principle:
Introduce foreign gene(aka recombinant molecule) into host cells(bacteria, yeast, Chinese hamster ovary)
Plasmid replicate inside the host, causing genes on plasmid to be expressed including selectable marker
Inefficient process as only 1/10,000 cells transform
Process of Bacterial Transformation:
Preparation of competent cells:
Bacteria are treated with specific chemicals or subjected to temperature changes to make them "competent," or capable of taking up DNA.
Addition of foreign DNA:
The desired DNA, often in the form of a plasmid, is added to the competent cells.
Incubation:
The cells are incubated on ice to allow the DNA to bind to the cell surface.
Heat shock:
The cells are briefly exposed to a sudden increase in temperature, which causes the cell membranes to become more permeable, allowing the DNA to enter the cells.
Recovery:
The cells are then incubated in a nutrient-rich medium to allow them to recover and express the genes carried by the foreign DNA.
Plasmid:
circular piece of autonomously replicating DNA
originally evolved by bacteria
May express antibiotic resistance genes or be modified to express proteins of interest
Gene Expression
bla: Beta Lactamase
Ampicillin resistance
GFP: Glowing Fluorescent protein (Aequorea victoria jellyfish gene)
araC: regulator protein
Regulates GFP transcription
Electroporation:
Electrical shock makes cell membranes permeable to DNA
Heat Shock:
Use CaCl2 to stabalize the -DNA Phosphate Backbone
Process of Heat Shock:
Ice for 10-15 minutes
Heat in waterbath for 90 seconds
Ice for 2 minutes
Chemically competent cells uptake DNA after heat shock
Purpose of Steps:
CaCl2
Transformation Solution
Positive charge of Ca++ ions shield negative charge of DNA phosphates
Incubation on Ice
Slows fluid Cell Membrane
Heat Shock
Increases Permeability of Membrane
Nutrient Broth Incubation
Allows Beta-lactamase expression
We use Luria-Bertani(LB) Broth
Media that contains nutrients for bacterial growth & gene expression
carbohydrates
amino acids
salts
vitamins
Transformation Efficeny:
percent of bacterial colonies that uptake the recombinant plasmid
On average, only 1 in 10,000 bacterial cells take up the plasmid
expressed as the number of transformed colonies per microgram of plasmid DNA
Steps to finding Transformation Efficency:
Find total mass of pGreen used in experiment
Concentration of plasmid * Volume of plasmid = Total Mass of Plasmid
Then find total volume of cell suspension prepared
CaCl2(250 uL) + LB(250 uL) + plasmid(10 uL) = Total Volume of Cell Suspension(510 uL)
Then find fraction of the total volume that used
Volume of Cell Suspension Spread/Total volume of cell suspension that we made
Then find the total mass of pGreen spread on plate
total mass of pGreen * Fraction spread = Mass of pGreen on plate
Now you can find the transformation efficency
transformation efficency = # of colonies counted/mass of pGreen plasmid spread
Factors Affecting Bacterial Transformation Efficiency:
Competence of cells:
Different bacterial strains have varying natural abilities to take up DNA. Some may require chemical treatment to become competent.
DNA quality:
The purity, size, and concentration of the DNA being introduced can influence transformation efficiency.
Heat shock conditions:
The duration and temperature of the heat shock step can affect the success of transformation.
Selection and screening:
Antibiotic resistance markers or fluorescent proteins are often used to select and screen for successfully transformed cells.
Satellite Colonies: small bacterial colonies that can surround a large antibiotic‐resistant colony when grown on nutrient agar plates
non-transformed
Grow as the large colony secretes β-lactamase enzyme to degrade ampicillin. The degradation of ampicillin around the large colony causes the reduction of ampicillin level in that area.
https://knowt.com/note/df094e3a-cf87-4c29-88e1-2ff2ea6f99f4/Bacterial-Transformation---Research---AI
Central Dogma: DNA (Transcription)→ RNA (Translation)→ Protein
GFP: Green Fluorescent Protein
found in Pacific Jellyfish(Aequorea victoria)
When excited by UV light/radiation the protein gives off a green light
applications:
genetic engineering includes the treatment of human genetic disease
production of transgenic crops
Transformation: Uptake of foreign DNA(often circular plasmid)
Transformation Principle:
Introduce foreign gene(aka recombinant molecule) into host cells(bacteria, yeast, Chinese hamster ovary)
Plasmid replicate inside the host, causing genes on plasmid to be expressed including selectable marker
Inefficient process as only 1/10,000 cells transform
Process of Bacterial Transformation:
Preparation of competent cells:
Bacteria are treated with specific chemicals or subjected to temperature changes to make them "competent," or capable of taking up DNA.
Addition of foreign DNA:
The desired DNA, often in the form of a plasmid, is added to the competent cells.
Incubation:
The cells are incubated on ice to allow the DNA to bind to the cell surface.
Heat shock:
The cells are briefly exposed to a sudden increase in temperature, which causes the cell membranes to become more permeable, allowing the DNA to enter the cells.
Recovery:
The cells are then incubated in a nutrient-rich medium to allow them to recover and express the genes carried by the foreign DNA.
Plasmid:
circular piece of autonomously replicating DNA
originally evolved by bacteria
May express antibiotic resistance genes or be modified to express proteins of interest
Gene Expression
bla: Beta Lactamase
Ampicillin resistance
GFP: Glowing Fluorescent protein (Aequorea victoria jellyfish gene)
araC: regulator protein
Regulates GFP transcription
Electroporation:
Electrical shock makes cell membranes permeable to DNA
Heat Shock:
Use CaCl2 to stabalize the -DNA Phosphate Backbone
Process of Heat Shock:
Ice for 10-15 minutes
Heat in waterbath for 90 seconds
Ice for 2 minutes
Chemically competent cells uptake DNA after heat shock
Purpose of Steps:
CaCl2
Transformation Solution
Positive charge of Ca++ ions shield negative charge of DNA phosphates
Incubation on Ice
Slows fluid Cell Membrane
Heat Shock
Increases Permeability of Membrane
Nutrient Broth Incubation
Allows Beta-lactamase expression
We use Luria-Bertani(LB) Broth
Media that contains nutrients for bacterial growth & gene expression
carbohydrates
amino acids
salts
vitamins
Transformation Efficeny:
percent of bacterial colonies that uptake the recombinant plasmid
On average, only 1 in 10,000 bacterial cells take up the plasmid
expressed as the number of transformed colonies per microgram of plasmid DNA
Steps to finding Transformation Efficency:
Find total mass of pGreen used in experiment
Concentration of plasmid * Volume of plasmid = Total Mass of Plasmid
Then find total volume of cell suspension prepared
CaCl2(250 uL) + LB(250 uL) + plasmid(10 uL) = Total Volume of Cell Suspension(510 uL)
Then find fraction of the total volume that used
Volume of Cell Suspension Spread/Total volume of cell suspension that we made
Then find the total mass of pGreen spread on plate
total mass of pGreen * Fraction spread = Mass of pGreen on plate
Now you can find the transformation efficency
transformation efficency = # of colonies counted/mass of pGreen plasmid spread
Factors Affecting Bacterial Transformation Efficiency:
Competence of cells:
Different bacterial strains have varying natural abilities to take up DNA. Some may require chemical treatment to become competent.
DNA quality:
The purity, size, and concentration of the DNA being introduced can influence transformation efficiency.
Heat shock conditions:
The duration and temperature of the heat shock step can affect the success of transformation.
Selection and screening:
Antibiotic resistance markers or fluorescent proteins are often used to select and screen for successfully transformed cells.
Satellite Colonies: small bacterial colonies that can surround a large antibiotic‐resistant colony when grown on nutrient agar plates
non-transformed
Grow as the large colony secretes β-lactamase enzyme to degrade ampicillin. The degradation of ampicillin around the large colony causes the reduction of ampicillin level in that area.
https://knowt.com/note/df094e3a-cf87-4c29-88e1-2ff2ea6f99f4/Bacterial-Transformation---Research---AI