Part:BBa_K3037002
dead CRISPR Associated Protein (dCas9)
dCas9 | |
---|---|
Function | Expression |
Use in | Escherichia coli |
RFC standard | Freiburg RFC25 standard |
Backbone | pSB1C3 |
Experimental Backbone | pOCC97 |
Submitted by | Team: TU_Dresden 2019 |
Contents
Overview
The TU_Dresden 2019 team designed this BioBrick in order to make a fusion protein (BBa_K3037003) with dCas9 in accordance to the Freiburg RFC25 standard. (more information)
dCas9 was inserted into the pOCC97 vector (BBa_K3037000) for transformation and expression in Escherichia coli (E. coli).
There are many dCas9 BioBricks already available, however, all of them are optimized for the expression in mammalian cells. This is the very first dCas9 BioBrick that has been codon optimized for expression in E. coli. Therefore, we are adding a new scope of in vitro applications of Cas9, which is normally used in vivo, to the iGEM community.
Biology
dCas9 is a mutant derived from Cas9. Cas9 forms together with the CRISPR, which stores sequences of viral infections, regions a primitive antiviral defense system of bacteria, . Cas9 has the ability, when coupled with a guideRNA, to bind to a specific sequence of DNA and . However, in difference to its natural counterpart, dCas9 does not longer have the endonuclease activity. That means it is specifically binding different DNA-sequences without cutting them.
The targeted sequence is determined by the guide_RNA bound to the dCas9 protein. Binding is done at 37°C for one hour. We can use the system by providing guideRNAs to locate to any target DNA sequence with a high specificity.
Characterization
Overview
We performed the following characterization experiments:
1) Prove of DNA-binding ability of dCas9 via Electrophoretic Mobility Shift Assay (EMSA) (Performed with BBa K3037005)
Experiments in Detail
1) Prove of DNA-binding ability of dCas9 via EMSA
1. Materials:
- 100 ng of PCR amplified sry gene
- 200 ng of dCas9-GFP
- 200 ng of guide RNA specifically targeting the amplified sry gene
- 1 x Reaction buffer - 20 mM Hepes buffer (pH 7.2)
- 100 mM NaCl
- 5 mM MgCl2
- 0.1 mM EDTA
Six different guide RNAs were designed for targeting different regions of sry gene. Using the online tool Benchling and Fasta sequence of sry gene
1: AACTAAACATAAGAAAGTGA
2: GAAAGCCACACACTCAAGAA
3: ACTGGACAACAGGTTGTACA
4: GTAGGACAATCGGGTAACAT
5: TTCGCTGCAGAGTACCGAAG
6: CCATGAACGCATTCATCGTG
2. Methods:
1. We wanted to check if the overall efficiency of mobility shift increases when combinations of guide RNAs are used, so individual reactions with combinations of guide RNA were used.
2. Guide RNA, dCas9-GFP and sry gene were incubated in reaction buffer (respective amounts mentioned in the materials section) for 37 °C for 1 hour.
3. Post incubation, they were mixed with loading dye without SDS, 20 % glycerol in Orange G dye and loaded onto 4-20 % gradient acrylamide- TBE precast gel. Gel was run for 3 hours at 75V in 1 x TBE buffer.
4. Gel was then stained using EtBR with 1:20000 dilution in 1x TBE for 10 minutes.
3.1 Results and Discussion of the 2 hours gel:
Lane 1 - There is a clear sry gene at 800 base pairs and when sry gene is incubated with only dCas9
Lane 2 - There is no shift seen in the position of the gene.
Lane 3 - When guide RNA 1 was incubated with the dCas9 DNA reaction mix, we saw a shift in the mobility, this is because of the protein DNA interaction and this binding is hindering the gene mobility.
Lanes 5,6,7,8 and 9 – Different combinations of guide RNAs were used. From lane 7 and 8 we see the highest mobility shift.
From the electromobility shift assay performed above, we conclude that our expressed dCas9-GFP protein is functional and is able to successfully bind to gene with the help of appropriate guide RNAs.
3.2 Results and Discussion of the 3 hours gel:
This second gel was run longer in order to get rid of all the secondary structures of the RNA formed.
From the Lanes 3 to 7, no difference in the mobility of sry gene can be seen when only guide RNA is added to the reaction mix.
In the Lanes 8, 9 and 10 a mobility shift of the gene can be appreciated and in lane 11, when only guide RNA was loaded no bands were observed.
In the Lane 12, dCas9 is in the stacking part of gel, owing to higher molecular weight.
4. Conclusions:
- We have a functional dCas9 expressed, which is able to bind successfully to sry gene with the help of guide RNA.
- dCas9 on its own is unable to bind to sry gene, suggesting that for binding guide RNA is required.
- Guide RNA on their own is unable to cause mobility shift of sry gene.
Sequence
- 10COMPATIBLE WITH RFC[10]
- 12INCOMPATIBLE WITH RFC[12]Illegal NheI site found at 1096
- 21INCOMPATIBLE WITH RFC[21]Illegal BamHI site found at 3375
- 23COMPATIBLE WITH RFC[23]
- 25COMPATIBLE WITH RFC[25]
- 1000COMPATIBLE WITH RFC[1000]
Design Notes
In the middle of the coding sequence there was an EcoRI site. As a forbidden restriction enzyme site, this needed to be mutated. Therefore a site directed mutagenesis PCR was preformed with the following primers:
Primer 1: gatcGAATTCGCGGCCGCTTCTAGATAAGGAGGTCAAAAATGgccggcGATAAGAAATACTCAATAGGC
Primer 2: CATAATAAGGAATaCGAAAAGTCAAG
Primer 3: CATAATAAGGAATaCGAAAAGTCAAG
Primer 4: gatcTCTGCAGCGGCCGCTACTAGTAttaaccggtGTCACCTCCTAGCTGACTCAAATC
The primers used to adapt this BioBrick to the Freiburg RFC25 standard were the following ones:
Prefix: GAATTCGCGGCCGCTTCTAGATAAGGAGGTCAAAAATGgccggc
Suffix: accggttaaTACTAGTAGCGGCCGCTGCAG
Find more information in here
References
None |