THE CLONING OF
PLASMID AND SPINACH DNA
Teri Curtis
Adapted From Labs Written By Dr. Karen Armstrong-Malatesta and Judy Brown
1993 Woodrow Wilson Biology Institute
INTRODUCTION
The purpose of this lab is to ligate fragments of genomic DNA from spinach into a vector plasmid; this recombinant DNA is then used to transform Escherichia coli cells.
The major steps in this lab are as follows:
- Students will first extract genomic DNA from
spinach.
- Students will perform a restriction enzyme
digestion on both the spinach DNA and the
plasmid using the same restriction enzyme.
Optional: If electrophoresis equipment is
available, students may run a gel on a portion
of each digest (the spinach and the plasmid) to
check for the presence of cut DNA in each digest
(see pages 247-275 in DNA Science).
- Students will ligate the cut plasmid DNA with
the cut spinach DNA in order to create a
recombinant plasmid.
- Students will transform E. coli cells with their
recombinant DNA molecule.
TARGET GROUP:
Second year biology students.
STUDENT/CLASS TIME REQUIRED
(in periods; 1 period = 50 min.):
MATERIALS:
(The following list provides enough material for 20 students working in pairs:
1. DNA EXTRACTION FROM SPINACH:
NOTE: If students have difficulty in obtaining adequate spinach DNA using the method in this lab, have them try the method in "Separation of DNA from Onion" by Ellen Avery, also found in this module.
2. RESTRICTION ENZYME DIGESTION:
plasmid DNA, order either:
pUC18 30ug/100 ul from Modern Biology, Inc
# 3-14-30 at $ 26.25
or
pUC8 10ug/100 ul from Carolina Biological
# 21-146 at $49.95
or
have students perform a plasmid miniprep on
an E. coli strain containing the plasmid
following the miniprep directions outlined in
the labs by Peggy Campbell in this module or
in DNA Science pages 313-323.
HindIII restriction enzyme, order either:
1000 units from Modern Biology, Inc #3-9A-1
at $21.00
or
2000 units from Carolina Biological
#21-1690 at $26.95
(both sent with restriction enzyme specific
buffer)
microcentrifuge tubes (1.5 ml size)
10 micropipettor + tips (1- 20 ul range)
(Modern Biology, Inc carries an inexpensive
model)
Distilled water
Genomic DNA extracted from spinach
2b.
For agarose gel electrophoresis see DNA Science
pages 256-270 for general instructions for
running a gel. Modern Biology, Inc has a
Reagent Package for DNA Gel which includes
agarose, electrophoresis buffer, loading buffer
(dye), and stain (either methylene blue or
ethidium bromide):
order #3-1 for pkg. w/methylene blue for
$51.45
order #3-2 for pkg. w/ethidium bromide for
$51.45
For 1kb marker order # 3-12 100ug/400ul
DNA Standard II from Modern Biology at $36.75
(enough for 30-40 lanes).
3. Ligation:
50 ul of T4 DNA ligase (2X ligase buffer
included) from Carolina #21-1740 at $53.80
Note: The ligase must be kept on ice until the moment it is needed for the ligation reactions.
each team should already have: plasmid digest
and genomic DNA (spinach) digest
4. Rapid Colony Transformation:
for complete list of materials see "Teacher
Preparation: Part I. Rapid Colony
Transformation" by Peggy Campbell.
Replace the LB agar+amp with
LB agar+amp+XGal or Nutrient agar+amp+Xgal.
From Modern Biology, 400 ml of Nutrient
agar+amp+XGal is #4-4X at $26.25, and 400 ml
of Nutrient agar is #4-3 at $13.15.
E. coli strain, order either:
plate of strain DH5 from Modern Biology #4-5 at
$7.35.
or
slant of strain JM101 from Carolina Biological
#21-1561 at $6.95.
STUDENT INSTRUCTIONS
INTRODUCTION
In this lab you will have the opportunity to make a recombinant DNA molecule by combining a fragment of spinach DNA with a vector plasmid.
First, you will extract DNA from spinach. Second, you will cut this spinach DNA with the restriction enzyme(RE) HINDIII. You will also cut the vector plasmid (pUC18, pUC8 or some other appropriate plasmid provided by your instructor) with HINDIII (It's critical that the plasmid DNA and the genomic DNA from the spinach are cut with the same restriction enzyme. Why?).
You will then mix the digested spinach DNA and the digested plasmid together. With skill and a little luck, the sticky ends of the plasmid will meet the sticky ends of the spinach DNA fragments (which you created with the RE HINDIII) to form a recombinant plasmid. Ligase will be added to catalyze the formation of covalent bonds between the fragments of this DNA molecule.
Next, you will use your newly ligated DNA molecule to transform E.coli cells. How will you know if your transformation is successful?
The plasmid which you are using in this lab has been genetically engineered to exhibit certain traits. The plasmid has a gne for ampicillin resistance. It also carries a portion of the coding regions for the E.coli LacZ gene. This segment of the LacZ gene is known as the alpha-complementary region. In its entirety, the LacZ gene encodes the enzyme beta-galactosidase; this enzyme metabolizes lactose. In certain strains of E coli which encode the rest of the of the LacZ gene and also carry a plasmid with an alpha-complementary region, the colonies are normally blue in color on plates containing a chromogenic substrate (XGal) of beta-galactosidase.
Beta-galactosidase will only be produced if the entire LacZ gene is present. The plasmid in this lab has been engineered so that its restriction enzyme sites are located in the LacZ-encoding region. Therefore, when a fragment of DNA is inserted into this plasmid, the LacZ (alpha-complementary) region is disrupted. The result is that the LacZ gene no longer works and the E.coli carrying this recombinant plasmid are white instead of blue.
PROCEDURE
Part I. Spinach Extraction
- Add 12 g of fresh green spinach leaves, 1 ml of
water and a few grains of sand to a mortar and
pestle. Grind the leaves until they look creamed.
- Add 1 ml of 20% detergent and 9 g of salt to the
mush and mix (this step helps lyse the cell walls
and membranes).
- Pour or scrape the spinach mush into a large
tube and incubate in a 65deg.C hot water bath for
10 minutes.
- Place mush on ice to stop the process. Filter the
mush through 4 layers of cheesecloth into a
beaker. Your filtrate can be stored overnight in
the refrigerator at this point.
- Pour 6 ml of the filtrate into a centrifuge tube
and add 1 ml of 15% meat tenderizer (Adolf's)
solution. Gently invert the tube to mix (this step
helps remove protein from the DNA).
- Slowly pour 6 ml of cold 95% ethanol down the
side of the tube. Spool the DNA onto hooked
Pasteur pipette by gently stirring at the
interface of the alcohol and filtrate. If you are
unable to get the DNA to spool, try centrifuging
the mixture. The DNA looks gelatinous (like
clear mucus).
- Carefully put the rod containing the DNA into a
test tube (5 to 10 ml) containing 3ml of the salt
solution.
Part II. Restriction Enzyme Digestion
- Set-up the following digests in microcentrifuge
tubes adding reagents in the order listed (be
sure to label your tubes A, B, C, D). Add
reagents to the tubes in the order that they are
listed from left to right:
TUBE A: Plasma digest
10X RE buffer = 2ul
plasmid DNA = 3ul
Spinach DNA = 0ul
RE HindIII = 1ul
H20 = 14ul
TUBE B: Uncut plasmid
10X buffer = 2ul
plasmid DNA = 3ul
Spinach DNA = 0ul
RE HindIII = 0ul
H20 = 15ul
TUBE C: Spinach DNA digest
10X buffer = 5ul
plasmid DNA = 0ul
spinach DNA = 30ul
RE HindIII = 5ul
H20 = 10ul
TUBE D: Uncut Spinach DNA
10X buffer = 5ul
plasmid DNA = 0ul
spinach DNA = 30ul
RE HindIII = 0ul
H20 = 15ul
- Incubate these digests in a 37deg.C water bath for
30 min.
- When the incubation time is complete, heat
inactivate the RE's by putting your digests in the
65deg.C water bath for 5 min. Your digests may be
stored in the refrigerator overnight.
Optional: If you have electrophoresis equipment, it's a good idea to make sure that you actually have digested plasmid DNA (tube A), undigested plasmid (tube B), digested spinach DNA (tube C),and undigested spinach DNA (tube D). If equipment is not available, you should skip down to Part III. Ligation. Otherwise, follow instructions from your teacher for setting up your
agarose gel and electrophoresis equipment. After you have poured your gel, do the following:
Number fresh microtubes 1 to 4. Add 4 microl of loading dye to each tube. Then add the following (remember to change the tips of your micropipettor in between different reagents):
tube #1 5ul digested plasmid DNA
tube #2 5ul undigested plasmid DNA
tube #3 5ul digested spinach DNA
tube #4 5ul undigested spinach DNA
Tap each tube to insure that the drops of loading dye and DNA are brought together.
Load the mixtures from your tubes into your gel in the following manner:
Lane 1 - 9 ul from tube 1
Lane 2 - " " tube 2
Lane 3 - " " tube 3
Lane 4 - " " tube 4
Lane 5 - 15 ul of DNA Standard II (dye included)
Follow teacher instructions for running the gel.
Part III. Ligation
- Place the following substances in the order listed
into a microfuge tube:
25 ul 2X buffer
10 ul plasmid digest
10 ul spinach DNA digest
4 ul T4 DNA ligase
24 ul dH2O
- Incubate at room temperature for 2 to 3 hours
(or overnight in the refrigerator).
Part IV. Transformation of E.coli with ligated DNA
- After the ligation mixes have incubated, you are
ready to perform the transformation of E.coli
cells. Follow the Rapid Colony Transformation
method as described by Peggy Campbell in this
module or on pages 303-307 of DNA Science
with the following modifications:
A. Each place that the lab procedure refers to
+pAMP or -pAMP, you substitute +pUC18(or
pUC8) and -pUC18 (or pUC8).
B. You also will use two LB plates (no ampicillin) or
two nutrient agar plates (no ampicillin).
However, instead of using two LB/amp plates
you will use either two LB+amp+XGal plates or
two nutrient agar+amp+XGal plates.
C. You should refer to the following matrix when
plating out your E. coli cells:
+pUC18 -pUC18
Agar used (or pUC8) (or pUC8)
LB 100 ul 100 ul
(nutrient agar)
LB/amp+XGal 100 ul 100 ul
(nutrient agar+ amp+XGal)
Part V. Analysis
- Observe the colonies through the bottom of the
culture. Record your results. Are your results
what you expected?
- What does the presence or absence of colonies
on each plate indicate?
- Did transformation take place? What evidence
do you have to support your conclusion?
Explain.
- Were you successful in transforming E.coli cells
with a recombinant plasmid? How do you
know?
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