1 / 14

Bacterial Transformation with ( pGLO Plasmid)

Bacterial Transformation with ( pGLO Plasmid). Lab #9: Molecular Biology. Purpose of this Lab. Learn how to insert a gene into bacteria (Heat Shock) Analyze how a gene can transform an organism and express that gene

Download Presentation

Bacterial Transformation with ( pGLO Plasmid)

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Bacterial Transformation with (pGLO Plasmid) Lab #9: Molecular Biology

  2. Purpose of this Lab • Learn how to insert a gene into bacteria (Heat Shock) • Analyze how a gene can transform an organism and express that gene • Provide evidence that bacteria can take in foreign DNA in the form of a plasmid • Reinforce the following process: DNA  RNA  Protein  Trait • Observe how genes are regulated

  3. Applications of Genetic Transformation • Used in many areas of Biotechnology • Agriculture (pests, frost, & drought) • Bacteria (oil spills) • Gene therapy (sick cells into healthy cells) • Medicine (produce insulin & hormones)

  4. Key Terms to Know • DNA: Plasmid • Bacteria: E. coli (strain: HB101K-12) • Growth media: LB Broth (Luria & Bertani) • Ampicillin: Antibiotic kills bacteria “amp” • Arabinose: Sugar source for energy & carbon • Heat shock Process that increases permeability of the cell membrane to DNA • GFP: Green Fluorescent Protein (w/UV)

  5. The Genes of Interest • Ampicillin resistance • Gene regulation proteins-activate the GFP gene when arabinose is present • GFP: Green Fluorescent Protein -originally isolated from the jellyfish: Aequorea victoria

  6. Supplies for each Group of 4-5 (1) E. Coli-starter plate: has colonies present “LB” S (4) Agar plates: 1-LB 2-LB/amp 1-LB/amp/ara • Styrofoam holder tray w/ four vials (5) Pipets (7) Yellow inoculation loops: 1 package • Cup of crushed ice & water • Sharpie marking pen Masking tape

  7. Check your Materials-See List • Take out what you’ll need ***(leave packages sealed) • Label your capped vials as follows: • Yellow: “ - pGlo” • Orange: “ + pGlo” • Green: “TS”- Transformation Soln. • Pink: “LB broth”

  8. Using the Pipet Properly • Find the markings for each graduated volume on the pipet

  9. Basic Process -Begin with “Starter” colonies of E. coli -Place a colony into each of the two tubes provided. labeled: -pGlo and +pGlo (yellow loop) -Add the pGlo plasmid to the +pGlo tube only(yellow loop) -Place tubes on ice (10 min) bottom of tubes should be exposed to the ice -Label the four plates as indicated in your guide -Heat Shock the tubes in water bath (50 sec.) -Return to the ice (2 min) -Add 250 L of LB broth to both tubes (sterile pipette each time) -Add 100 L of tube contents to the appropriate plates -Spread the samples (w/yellow loop) & tape all four plates together. Be sure your period and group name is clearly indicated.

  10. Adding Transformation Solution

  11. Transferring Colonies, Labeling the Plates, & Using Heat Shock

  12. The Process of Heat Shock • Helps to increase the bacterial uptake of foreign DNA • Membrane becomes more permeable to DNA • Time is essential: -ice  water bath (42ºC) for 50 sec. ice • The number of transformants should increase

  13. Adding the Bacteria to the labeled Plates

  14. Expected Results

More Related