Team:BYU Provo/Notebook/Phage Purification/Winterexp/Period1/Exp/6.24CsClGradient

From 2013.igem.org

Revision as of 20:37, 1 July 2013 by Dlasko10 (Talk | contribs)
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)


Phage Purification May - June Notebook: Experiments



Overview
March-April
May-June
July-August
September-October

6.24 CsCl Gradient


I) Purpose

Further purify the phage to a high level of purification.

II) Expected Outcome

Purified and viable phage will be extracted from the CsCl gradient.

III) Reagants Used

T7 purified phage
CsCl
phage suspension buffer


IV) Actual Procedure

Create different concentrations of CsCl solutions to create a gradient.
Add 1.64 g of CsCl to 4 ml of phage suspension buffer to create a 1.3 g/ml density gradient.
Add 4.10 g of CsCl to 6 ml of phage suspension buffer to create a 1.5 g/ml density gradient.
Add 4.92 g of CsCl to 6 ml of phage suspension buffer to create a 1.6 g/ml density gradient.
Add 5.76 g of CsCl to 6 ml of phage suspension buffer to create a 1.7 g/ml density gradient.
Layer a centrifuge tube with 3 mL 1.7 g/mL, 3 mL 1.6 g/mL, 3 mL of 1.5 g/mL, and then 2 mL of 1.3 g/mL.
Layer T7 on top of the gradient in separate tubes(as much as is available).
Fill the remaining space in the tube with phage suspension buffer to the top.
Centrifuge at 26500 rpms (100,000 g) for 2.5 hours.
Extract using a needle and puncturing the side of the tube, placing the needle underneath the band.

V) Results

We were able to successfully extract phage from the CsCl. Dr. Grose explained that the band which we had previously thought to be the bacterial debris was probably the purified phage. We extracted phage from this band and will be performing a titer on it next class.