Team:IIT Delhi/Notebook

From 2013.igem.org

(Difference between revisions)
Line 229: Line 229:
       <hr style="width: 100%; height: 2px;"><br>
       <hr style="width: 100%; height: 2px;"><br>
The wet lab experiments throughout the summers were a roller coaster ride. Most of us had very little prior experience in biotechnology laboratories and, initially, were very apprehensive in working in the lab. Gradually, we gained experience in the methods and became more confident about the work. Each new day brought up a set of new problems and every day we had to find new ways for troubleshooting. Following is a concise notebook of our work through the summers:<br><br><b>Week 1</b><br>1. Our plan of work included cloning the asr promoter in the high copy number plasmid, pUC19 (Ampicillin resistance). For this reason, we designed the primers for asr amplification with EcoRI and BamHI as the restriction enzyme sites respectively. We thought of linearizing the plasmid till the primers arrived.<br>2. The pUC19 plasmid was isolated using the Qiagen miniprep plasmid isolation Kit from an overnight culture, inoculated from an old plate of transformed DH5α cells. Running 1uL on 1% Agarose Gel indicated a good concentration of plasmid isolated.<br>3. To check if the restriction enzymes present in the lab are usable, we digested the isolated plasmid with the two enzymes separately and ran them on the gel. Following was the result:<br><br>
The wet lab experiments throughout the summers were a roller coaster ride. Most of us had very little prior experience in biotechnology laboratories and, initially, were very apprehensive in working in the lab. Gradually, we gained experience in the methods and became more confident about the work. Each new day brought up a set of new problems and every day we had to find new ways for troubleshooting. Following is a concise notebook of our work through the summers:<br><br><b>Week 1</b><br>1. Our plan of work included cloning the asr promoter in the high copy number plasmid, pUC19 (Ampicillin resistance). For this reason, we designed the primers for asr amplification with EcoRI and BamHI as the restriction enzyme sites respectively. We thought of linearizing the plasmid till the primers arrived.<br>2. The pUC19 plasmid was isolated using the Qiagen miniprep plasmid isolation Kit from an overnight culture, inoculated from an old plate of transformed DH5α cells. Running 1uL on 1% Agarose Gel indicated a good concentration of plasmid isolated.<br>3. To check if the restriction enzymes present in the lab are usable, we digested the isolated plasmid with the two enzymes separately and ran them on the gel. Following was the result:<br><br>
-
<img src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2013/f/f1/Nb1.png" width=239 height= 250 align=middle><br>
+
<img src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2013/f/f1/Nb1.png" width=239 height= 250 align=middle><br><br>Clearly the plasmid was not digested properly by either of the two enzymes, which is why more enzyme (0.5uL each) was added to each microcentrifuge tube and kept for further incubation.<br>4. The plasmid was found to be completely digested by EcoRI. However, the sample containing BamHI was still found to contain uncut plasmid DNA. This plasmid was discarded and fresh colonies inoculated for plasmid isolation.<br><br>Week 2<br><br>1. Midiprep plasmid isolation was carried out to obtain high yield of pUC19 plasmid.<br>2. This time the digestions yielded completely cut plasmid and, hence, the single digested product was further digested with the opposite enzyme and run on the gel:<br><br>
 +
<img src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2013/e/ed/Nb2.png" align=middle><br>
       <br>
       <br>
       <br>
       <br>

Revision as of 01:25, 28 September 2013

Navigation-Top




Lab Notebook


The wet lab experiments throughout the summers were a roller coaster ride. Most of us had very little prior experience in biotechnology laboratories and, initially, were very apprehensive in working in the lab. Gradually, we gained experience in the methods and became more confident about the work. Each new day brought up a set of new problems and every day we had to find new ways for troubleshooting. Following is a concise notebook of our work through the summers:

Week 1
1. Our plan of work included cloning the asr promoter in the high copy number plasmid, pUC19 (Ampicillin resistance). For this reason, we designed the primers for asr amplification with EcoRI and BamHI as the restriction enzyme sites respectively. We thought of linearizing the plasmid till the primers arrived.
2. The pUC19 plasmid was isolated using the Qiagen miniprep plasmid isolation Kit from an overnight culture, inoculated from an old plate of transformed DH5α cells. Running 1uL on 1% Agarose Gel indicated a good concentration of plasmid isolated.
3. To check if the restriction enzymes present in the lab are usable, we digested the isolated plasmid with the two enzymes separately and ran them on the gel. Following was the result:



Clearly the plasmid was not digested properly by either of the two enzymes, which is why more enzyme (0.5uL each) was added to each microcentrifuge tube and kept for further incubation.
4. The plasmid was found to be completely digested by EcoRI. However, the sample containing BamHI was still found to contain uncut plasmid DNA. This plasmid was discarded and fresh colonies inoculated for plasmid isolation.

Week 2

1. Midiprep plasmid isolation was carried out to obtain high yield of pUC19 plasmid.
2. This time the digestions yielded completely cut plasmid and, hence, the single digested product was further digested with the opposite enzyme and run on the gel:


























Feel Free to contact us at igemiitdelhi2013 at gmail dot com if you have queries; requests; suggestions et cetera.

Thanks to iGEM and IIT Delhi,
we had an awesome summer!
Our Project was supported by and done by the students

 of IIT Delhi, India.

This project was done as a part of iGEM:
iGEM Main Website