Team:ULB-Brussels/Homologous

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Hydrogen Production     Bacteria planned death system

Homologous recombination

The aim of this module is to provide the iGEM community with the tools we used to delete genes in Escherichia coli. The deletions were performed using the phage λ Red system, as described by Datsenko and Wanner[1]. The toolbox is composed of two plasmid helpers and two antibiotic resistance cassettes BioBricks, adapted to iGEM standards. Basically, one could delete a gene with only this toolbox and a couple of primers designed specifically for the target gene.
We think that a simple way to delete genes could be a great asset in the context of designing new biological systems, and thus could be useful to future iGEM participants. Provided that the gene is not essential to the microorganism, the deletion could be constructed for different purposes, and open up new approaches in iGEM's synthetic biology projects, together with the BioBricks system. For example, removing a specific gene could enhance a particular metabolic pathway, like we did for the hydrogen production. Moreover, it could be easier to delete a gene hindering the production of a desired product than to over-express enhancer genes. It could also be useful if a gene is interfering with the function of a BioBrick.

 

How it works

 

In order to delete a gene, the first step is to perform a PCR using specific primers and a resistance cassette as template. The fragment is used by the Red system to replace the target gene with the resistance cassette, and the recombinant clones are then selected on an appropriate selection medium. The antibiotic resistance gene is then removed, so as to allow several deletions in the same strain while avoiding multiple resistances. Before explaining in details those steps, we will first introduce the different elements.
The first plasmid helper (PH λ) contains the three genes of the λ Red system: γ, β, and exo, necessary for homologous recombination. The γ gene encodes Gam, which prevents an exonuclease of E. coli from inhibiting the homologous recombination, while Exo is a 3’-5’ exonuclease preparing the PCR product for the homologous recombination reaction. The product of β, Bet, is the recombination enzyme.
The second plasmid helper (PHFlp) contains the flp gene encoding the Flippase, a site-specific recombination enzyme (Flp). Flp recognizes small sequences called Flippase recognition target (frt), and, in a way similar to the Cre-Lox system, catalyzes a site-specific recombination reaction between the two frt sites. In this case, it is used to remove the frt-flanked antibiotic resistance gene that replaces the deletion target gene.
Both plasmid helpers are low copy thermosensitive replicons, which means the plasmids do not replicate at 42°C. Thus, the plasmids are easily cured after the different recombination steps and the strain deleted of the target gene do not contain neither plasmids nor antibiotic resistance gene. Moreover, expression of the different genes is conditionally induced at 42°C which provides a strict control of activity.

 


Figure 1: plasmids helper lambda and Flp

The antibiotic resistance cassettes plasmids (RCP) are plasmids with a resistance gene flanked by two frt sequences (fig.2). There are two resistance cassette plasmids, one with a kanamycin resistance marker (RCPKan) and the other with a chloramphenicol resistance marker (RCPCm)

 


Figure 2 : Resistance cassette kanamycin

The primers used for the homologous recombination step contain a constant 3’region and a variable 5’ region (fig.3).  The sequence of the 5’ variable region depends on the target gene and is homologous to the sequence flanking the target gene.   The 3’ constant region is the priming sequence for the resistance gene PCR amplification.

 


Figure 3: Homologous recombination deletion primers

With these elements, a gene deletion can be constructed in three main steps (fig.4).

 


Figure 4 : Deletion procedure

Step 1: PCR

The first step consists of a PCR to produce the sequence which will replace the target gene. Using the frt-flanked antibiotic resistance gene carried by the RCP as template together with the primers designed specifically for the target gene, the PCR product is a sequence which can be inserted into the E. coli chromosome by homologous recombination with the Red system (fig.5).

 


Figure 5 : Deletion procedure step 1

Step 2: Homologous recombination

An E. coli strain containing the PH λ is then electroporated with the purified PCR product obtained in Step 1. After heat induction, Gam, Bet and Exo catalyze the homologous recombination reaction.

 


Figure 6 : Deletion procedure step 2

Step 3: Antibiotic resistance elimination

After selection on an appropriate selection medium, the mutant strain is transformed with the PHFlp using the TSS[2] method.  The recombinant candidates are then grown at 42°C.  This allows the elimaination of the resistance marker by Flp-dependent site-specific recombination as well as the curing of PHFlp (fig.7).

 


Figure 7 : Deletion procedure step 3

 

Parts Design

 

PH λ and PHFlp are derived from the Red recombinase plasmid pKD46[3]. Our goal was to adapt them to at least one iGEM standard, and to change the original arabinose inducible promoter controlling the expression of the Red system to a thermo-inducible promoter.

 


Figure 8 : plasmid pKD46 and priming sites

For PH λ, the RCF21 standard was selected. The idea was to preserve the thermosensitive replication origin (repA101 and oriR101) and the ampicillin resistance of pKD46 while removing the red operon. The pKD46 backbone was amplified using primers flanking the red operon (γ, β, and exo genes) (fig.8), extended with RCF21 prefix and suffix.  In a second step, we amplified by PCR gam and bet, with primers containing RCF21 prefixes and suffixes.  The exo gene was synthesised[4] with a silent mutation at the EcoR1 restriction site, to make it compatible with RCF 21 and 10. The red operon is reconstructed and placed under the control of a thermoinducible promoter (BBa_K098995), RBS (B0034) and followed by a terminator (B0024) using the BioBrick system.

The primer sequences are given below, with RCF21 prefix and suffix in green.

pKD46 :
pKD46_RCF21_for : 5’-cccGGATCCTAACTCGAGCGCATCCTCACGATAATATC-3’
pKD46_RCF21_rev : 5’-cccAGATCTCATGAATTCTATGGCATAGCAAAGTGTGA -3’

γ :
gam_RCF21_for : 5’-cccGAATTCATGAGATCTATGGATATTAATACTGAAAC-3’
gam_RCF21_rev : 5’-cccCTCGAGTTAGGATCCTTATACCTCTGAATCAATAT-3’

β :
bet_RCF21_for : 5’-cccGAATTCATGAGATCTATGAGTACTGCACTCGCAAC-3’
bet_RCF21_rev : 5’-cccCTCGAGTTAGGATCCTCATGCTGCCACCTTCTGCT-3’

Three C's were added at the 5’-end of prefixes and suffixes to facilitate digestion by restriction enzymes (endonucleic enzymes).

We also started from pKD46 to construct PHFlp, except that the RCF10 standard was selected. The sequence of primers used for the pKD46 PCR were the same except for the RCF10 prefix and suffix extensions. We also preformed a PCR site-directed mutagenesis on the pKD46 PCR fragment to eliminate a SpeI restriction site in the oriR101 sequence. The flp gene was synthesized to be compatible with RCF10 and 21 standards, then cloned together with the pKD46 fragment, promoter, rbs and terminator.
The primer sequences are given below, with RCF10 prefix and suffix in green.

pKD46_RCF10_for : 5’-cccTACTAGTAGCGGCCGCTGCAGCGCATCCTCACGATAATATC-3’
pKD46_RCF10_rev : 5’-cccCTCTAGAAGCGGCCGCGAATTCTATGGCATAGCAAAGTGTGA-3’

For the RCPs, we used primers with R1 and R2 priming sites, extended with RCF10 prefix and suffix, to amplify the kanamycin and chloramphenicol resistance cassettes. The same primers are used for both resistance cassettes, as the R1 and R2 priming sequences are identical. The templates used are pKD4[5] for the kanamycin resistance cassette and pKD3[6] for the chloramphenicol resistance cassette.  The PCR fragments are then inserted in pSB1C3 plasmid backbones.

The primer sequences are given below, with RCF10 prefix and suffix in green.

RCF10prefix_R1 : 5’-cccGAATTCGCGGCCGCTTCTAGAGGTGTAGGCTGGAGCTGCTTC-3’
RCF10suffix_R2 : 5’-cccCTGCAGCGGCCGCTACTAGTACATATGAATATCCTCCTTA-3’

 

Materials and methods

 

The concentrations of the different antibiotics mentioned are 100µg/l, 50µg/l and 20µg/l, respectively for ampicillin, kanamycin and chloramphenicol.

 

Resistance gene PCR

 

The primers are designed by adding a ~ 40 bp homologous sequence (H) to a resistance gene priming site (R)(fig.9). The homologous sequences are complementary to sequences flanking the sequence to be deleted.  The forward primer is H1R1 and the reverse primer H2R2.

 


Figure 9 : Target gene, primer H1R1 and resistance cassette

R1 and R2 sequences are given below:

R1 (forward): 5’-GTGTAGGCTGGAGCTGCTTC-3’
R2 (reverse): 5’-CATATGAATATCCTCCTTA-3’

For instance, here is the sequence of the ldhA gene (encoding D-lactate dehydrogenase) (in blue):


If we take 40 bp homologous sequence extension (in green), the primers associated to ldha are the following:
H1R1 (forward):
5’-ATCTGAATCAGCTCCCCTGGAATGCAGGGGAGCGGCAAGAGTGTAGGCTGGAGCTGCTTC-3’
H2R2 (reverse):
5’-AGTAGCTTAAATGTGATTCAACATCACTGGAGAAAGTCTTCATATGAATATCCTCCTTA-3’

PCR were performed with the Promega® PCR kit (catalog # M8305) with 5% DMSO using the following thermocycler program:

 


Figure 9 : Target gene, primer H1R1 and resistance cassette

PCR products are then gel-purified. To eliminate the template DNA, digestion with DpnI and a second gel-purification are performed on the PCR product.

 

Homologous recombination

 

MG1655 containing PHλ are grown in LB supplemented with ampicillin at 30°C to an OD600 ~ 0.6. The culture is then incubated with agitation at 42°C for 20-30 min (depending of the volume of culture). For volume greater than 120 ml, the culture should be split into smaller volumes (40 ml) to ensure a homogenous heating to 42°C.  Electro-competent bacteria are prepared by cooling the culture on ice for 20-30 min, followed by a series of centrifugation (4) and wash with ice-cold water to concentrate bacteria 1000-fold.
50 µl of this suspension are electroporated with 10-100 ng of PCR product.  One ml of LB is added to the shocked cells. The cells are incubated 1 h at 37°C, then plated on agar plates with kanamycin or chloramphenicol to select recombinants.
After the first selection, recombinant colonies are isolated by streaking on agar medium with the appropriate antibiotic, and incubated 24 h at 37°C. This is done three times, to avoid undisrupted surnumerous chromosome copies.  After the third isolation, recombinants are PCR tested for the loss of the targeted gene.  

 

Resistance gene removal

 

Recombinants are grown in 5ml LB suppelemented with kanamycin or chloramphenicol at 37°C to an OD600 ~ 0.3.  One ml of culture is centrifuged (3,250 x g, 7 min). The pellet is resuspended in 100 µl of 1 X TSS[7]
Mix 100 µl of resuspended pellet with ~100µg of PHFlp, incubate 30 min on ice, then add 100 µl LB supplemented with kanamycin or chloramphenicol. Incubate 1 h at 30°C, then plate 50 µl on agar plates with ampicillin and incubate overnight at 30°C.
Inoculate in LB + ampicillin + kanamycin or chloramphenicol and incubate overnight at 30°C. Colonies are streaked on agar plate without antibiotic and incubate overnight at 42°C.
Streak successively on agar plates with ampicillin, on agar plate with kanamycin or chloramphenicol, and on agar plate without antibiotics. PCR-test colonies grown on agar plates without antibiotic to check for resistance removal. If the resistance has been successfully removed and the PHFlp cured, colonies should grow only on the antibiotic-free medium.

 

PCR verifications

 

The verifications for correct recombination and resistance gene removal are preformed by PCR, using gene-specific primers. The primers are designed with priming sites around180-200 bp away from the targeted gene, so that in case of a successful resistance gene removal, the amplified PCR fragments would be long enough to be easily detectable in agar gel electrophoresis.

 

Results and discussion

 

While we succeeded in deleting genes for the H2 production part, with a method very similar to the one exposed above, this part of the project remained mostly theoritical. On the workbench, we first focused on the other parts of the project, our priority being gene deletions with the tools available.
In addition, we encountered many difficulties in putting together the different elements in the plasmid backbones. The lack of time prevented us from achieving any usable parts for the toolbox we proposed. Even though, we thought it interesting enough to present what we initially wanted to do.


[1]  One-step inactivation of chromosomal gene in Escherichia coli K-12 using PCR products, K.A. Datsenko and B.L. Wanner (2000)

[2] Transformation and Storage Solution

[3] See http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/nuccore/15554345?report=genbank for features and complete sequence.

[7] 1 X TSS = 10% PEG (wt/vol) , 5% (DMSO)vol/vol, MgCl2 50 mM, LB

Hydrogen Production     Bacteria planned death system