Difference between revisions of "Team:Marburg/Measurement"

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                     As described before we used the following workflow as shown in Fig. 1 to cultivate and measure
 
                     As described before we used the following workflow as shown in Fig. 1 to cultivate and measure
 
                     our parts. The cultivation started by picking colonies from BG11-agar-plates that were used at the
 
                     our parts. The cultivation started by picking colonies from BG11-agar-plates that were used at the
                     end of the triparental conjugation. For every part we picked 3 different colonies and
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                     end of the triparental conjugation. For every part we picked three different colonies and
 
                     inoculated them in 1.0 mL BG11-media with 0.5 µl Spectinomycin. Thus in the first 24-well-plates
 
                     inoculated them in 1.0 mL BG11-media with 0.5 µl Spectinomycin. Thus in the first 24-well-plates
                     we could inoculate 8 different parts with 3 biological parallels. When the cultures grew to
+
                     we could inoculate eight different parts with three biological parallels. When the cultures grew to
 
                     OD<sub>730</sub>=0.6-0.8 they were inoculated to 1.0 mL of OD<sub>730</sub>=0.1 into the wells
 
                     OD<sub>730</sub>=0.6-0.8 they were inoculated to 1.0 mL of OD<sub>730</sub>=0.1 into the wells
 
                     A1-3 (part 1) and A4-6 (part 2) of another 24-well-plate. At the same time the Well B6 was
 
                     A1-3 (part 1) and A4-6 (part 2) of another 24-well-plate. At the same time the Well B6 was
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                     times. Following this workflow we were able to measure three biological parallels and
 
                     times. Following this workflow we were able to measure three biological parallels and
 
                     two technical parallels for every biological parallel. It enabled us to have a good statistical
 
                     two technical parallels for every biological parallel. It enabled us to have a good statistical
                     database and gives our results a stronger meaning/significance. While working with this workflow
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                     database and gives our results a stronger meaning and significance. While working with this workflow
 
                     it was essential to keep the cultures in their exponential phase because it would significantly
 
                     it was essential to keep the cultures in their exponential phase because it would significantly
 
                     speed up the growth by reducing the lag-phase to an absolute minimum.<br><br>
 
                     speed up the growth by reducing the lag-phase to an absolute minimum.<br><br>
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<p>
 
<p>
  
                     OD measure with plate reader: Settings: 730 nm, 3 measuring points (circle) <br> Fluorescence Settings: Excitation 488 nm,  Emission 518 nm size 2x2 (circle), frame 1200 μm strengthener:optimal <br><br>
+
                     OD measure with plate reader: Settings: 730 nm, three measuring points (circle) <br> Fluorescence Settings: Excitation 488 nm,  Emission 518 nm size 2x2 (circle), frame 1200 μm strengthener:optimal <br><br>
 
  <p style="text-align: justify; margin-bottom: 1em;">                 
 
  <p style="text-align: justify; margin-bottom: 1em;">                 
 
                     In order to measure the OD in each well we determined the absorption at 730 nm. Further we
 
                     In order to measure the OD in each well we determined the absorption at 730 nm. Further we

Revision as of 13:52, 8 December 2019

M E A S U R E M E N T


Amplifying new standards in measurement

We entered this project as the first Marburg iGEM team working with Synechococcus elongatus UTEX 2973, the fastest phototrophic organism. Missing knowledge in handling and cultivation of UTEX 2973 left us in front of many problems and questions. Especially the usage of different media, light conditions and other cultivating and measurement parameters were one of the biggest problems we discovered in scientific papers. Many of these problems are reasoned in the ongoing optimization and development of methods and instruments. Therefore it is hard to hold on to special methods; nevertheless, standardization is paramount in synthetic microbiology in order to be able to compare results with other scientists and reproduce their data.

Because we wanted to establish Synechococcus elongatus as a new chassis for the iGEM community and scientists, we should find the best conditions for cultivation and the best measuring method for our parts in UTEX 2973. Therefore we analyzed a big variety of cultivating conditions in measuring growth curves, tried to find a standard in light measurement, evaluated different reporters, established a measurement method and compared it to a already known FACS measurement method.

At the beginning of our project we faced the first question: how to cultivate UTEX at 1500 μE? To answer this we had to measure the light conditions in our incubators and while doing this simple task the first part of standardization began. We discovered that nearly every paper is using different methods to measure their light conditions and that it is a really complex and important procedure. So we got in contact with Cyano and light measurement experts to confront this problem and standardize it. In the following popups we show different ways of measurement, their (dis-)advantages and different results depending on the measuring instrument.

Moreover, not only the light intensity but also a variety of other cultivating parameters needed to be analyzed. In literature and while talking with different experts, we recognized that small deviations of these parameters had a huge impact on the growth speed of Synechococcus elongatus. While establishing UTEX 2973 as a new chassis we evaluated this impact on the growth speed and were able to show combinations of parameters that lead to the fastest growth speed.

Other aspects were measuring the expression and characterizing our part. Different possibilities were discussed and after testing them we decided on two methods in our project. One approach was to measure the fluorescence/luminescence with a plate reader. Plate readers belong to standard equipment of every lab nowadays, and could deliver easy reproducible results. The second way was to measure the fluorescence by FACS (Fluorescence-Activated Cell Sorting). In contrast to a platerader a FACS device delivers results with high accuracy by measuring every cell by its own.

However, not every laboratory possesses a FACS device. So in the end we would like to offer a database - analyzed using these two methods - of our constructs for iGEM teams and research groups, who do not have access to a FACS device and show the difference in measurement methods.

In the end of the project we were able to create a protocol how to handle Synechococcus elongatus UTEX 2973 and make a contribution to the cyano community by establishing essential/fixed standards in measurements.


L I G H T
M E A S U R E M E N T


Light measurements are a crucial aspect when working on phototrophic organisms - here’s how we tackled some issues we faced!

R E P O R T E R S


Fluorescence Reporters

F A C S


FACS Measurements

P A R T
M E A S U R E M E N T


Establishing a measurement workflow that is not only applicable to UTEX 2973 and other cyanobacteria with a high throughput.

G R O W T H
C U R V E S


Varying our growth conditions we were finally able to achieve doubling times of under 80 minutes.