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Blue–white screen

The blue–white screen is a screening technique that allows for the rapid and convenient detection of recombinant bacteria in vector-based molecular cloning experiments. This method of screening is usually performed using a suitable bacterial strain, but other organisms such as yeast may also be used. DNA of transformation is ligated into a vector. The vector is then inserted into a competent host cell viable for transformation, which are then grown in the presence of X-gal. Cells transformed with vectors containing recombinant DNA will produce white colonies; cells transformed with non-recombinant plasmids (i.e. only the vector) grow into blue colonies.

An LB agar plate showing the result of a blue–white screen.

Background edit

Molecular cloning is one of the most commonly used procedures in molecular biology. A gene of interest may be inserted into a plasmid vector via ligation, and the plasmid is then transformed into Escherichia coli cells. However, not all the plasmids transformed into cells may contain the desired gene insert, and checking each individual colony for the presence of the insert is time-consuming. Therefore, a method for the detection of the insert would be useful for making this procedure less time- and labor-intensive. One of the early methods developed for the detection of insert is blue–white screening which allows for identification of successful products of cloning reactions through the colour of the bacterial colony.

The method is based on the principle of α-complementation of the β-galactosidase gene. This phenomenon of α-complementation was first demonstrated in work done by Agnes Ullmann in the laboratory of François Jacob and Jacques Monod, where the function of an inactive mutant β-galactosidase with deleted sequence was shown to be rescued by a fragment of β-galactosidase in which that same sequence, the α-donor peptide, is still intact.[1] Langley et al. showed that the mutant non-functional β-galactosidase was lacking in part of its N-terminus with its residues 11—41 deleted, but it may be complemented by a peptide formed of residues 3—90 of β-galactosidase.[2] M13 filamentous phage containing sequence coding for the first 145 amino acid was later constructed by Messing et al., and α-complementation via the use of a vector was demonstrated by the formation of blue plaques when cells containing the inactive protein were infected by the phage and then grown in plates containing X-gal.[3]

The pUC series of plasmid cloning vectors by Vieira and Messing was developed from the M13 system and were the first plasmids constructed to take advantage of this screening method.[4] In this method, DNA ligated into the plasmid disrupts the α peptide and therefore the complementation process, and no functional β-galactosidase can form. Cells transformed with plasmid containing an insert therefore form white colonies, while cells transformed with plasmid without an insert form blue colonies; result of a successful ligation can thus be easily identified by the white coloration of cells formed from the unsuccessful blue ones.[5]

Molecular mechanism edit

 
A schematic representation of the blue–white assay, used to screen for recombinant vectors

β-galactosidase is a protein encoded by the lacZ gene of the lac operon, and it exists as a homotetramer in its active state. However, a mutant β-galactosidase derived from the M15 strain of E. coli has its N-terminal residues 11—41 deleted and this mutant, the ω-peptide, is unable to form a tetramer and is inactive. This mutant form of protein however may return fully to its active tetrameric state in the presence of an N-terminal fragment of the protein, the α-peptide. The rescue of function of the mutant β-galactosidase by the α-peptide is called α-complementation.

In this method of screening, the host E. coli strain carries the lacZ deletion mutant (lacZΔM15) which contains the ω-peptide, while the plasmids used carry the lacZα sequence which encodes the first 59 residues of β-galactosidase, the α-peptide. Neither is functional by itself. However, when the two peptides are expressed together, as when a plasmid containing the lacZα sequence is transformed into a lacZΔM15 cells, they form a functional β-galactosidase enzyme.

The blue–white screening method works by disrupting this α-complementation process. The plasmid carries within the lacZα sequence an internal multiple cloning site (MCS). This MCS within the lacZα sequence can be cut by restriction enzymes so that the foreign DNA may be inserted within the lacZα gene, thereby disrupting the gene that produces α-peptide. Consequently, in cells containing the plasmid with an insert, no functional β-galactosidase may be formed.

The presence of an active β-galactosidase can be detected by X-gal, a colourless analog of lactose that may be cleaved by β-galactosidase to form 5-bromo-4-chloro-indoxyl, which then spontaneously dimerizes and oxidizes to form a bright blue insoluble pigment 5,5'-dibromo-4,4'-dichloro-indigo. This results in a characteristic blue colour in cells containing a functional β-galactosidase. Blue colonies therefore show that they may contain a vector with an uninterrupted lacZα (therefore no insert), while white colonies, where X-gal is not hydrolyzed, indicate the presence of an insert in lacZα which disrupts the formation of an active β-galactosidase.

The recombinant clones can be further analyzed by isolating and purifying small amounts of plasmid DNA from the transformed colonies and restriction enzymes can be used to cut the clone and determine if it has the fragment of interest.[6] If the DNA is necessary to be sequenced, the plasmids from the colonies will need to be isolated at a point, whether to cut using restriction enzymes or performing other assays.

Practical considerations edit

The correct type of vector and competent cells are important considerations when planning a blue–white screen. The plasmid must contain the lacZα, and examples of such plasmids are pUC19 and pBluescript. The E. coli cell should contain the mutant lacZ gene with deleted sequence (i.e. lacZΔM15), and some of the commonly used cells with such genotype are JM109, DH5α, and XL1-Blue. It should also be understood that the lac operon is affected by the presence of glucose. The protein EIIAGlc, which is involved in glucose import, shuts down lactose permease when glucose is being transported into the cell. The media used in agar plate therefore should not include glucose.

X-gal is light-sensitive and therefore its solution and plates containing X-gal should be stored in the dark. Isopropyl β-D-1-thiogalactopyranoside (IPTG), which functions as the inducer of the lac operon, may be used in the media to enhance the expression of LacZ.

X-gal is an expensive material, thus other methods have been developed in order to screen bacteria. GFP has been developed as an alternative to help screen bacteria. The concept is similar to α-complementation in which a DNA insert can disrupt the coding sequence within a vector and thus disrupt the GFP production resulting in non-fluorescing bacteria.[7] Bacteria that have recombinant vectors (vector + insert), will be white and not express the GFP protein, while non-recombinant (vector), will and fluoresce under UV light. GFP in general has been used as a reporter gene where individuals can definitively determine if a clone carries a gene that researchers are analyzing. On occasion, the medium in which the colonies grow can influence the screen and introduce false-positive results.[8] X-gal on the medium can occasionally degrade to produce a blue color or GFP can lose its fluorescence because of the medium and can impact researchers capabilities to determine colonies with the desire recombinant and those that do not possess it.[9]

Drawbacks edit

Some white colonies may not contain the desired recombinant plasmid for a number of reasons. The ligated DNA may not be the correct one or not properly ligated, and it is possible for some linearized vector to be transformed, its ends "repaired" and ligated together such that no LacZα is produced and no blue colonies may be formed. Mutation can also lead to the α-fragment not being expressed. A colony with no vector at all will also appear white, and may sometimes appear as satellite colonies after the antibiotic used has been depleted. It is also possible that blue colonies may contain the insert. This occurs when the insert is "in frame" with the LacZα gene and a STOP codon is absent in the insert. This can lead to the expression of a fusion protein that has a functional LacZα if its structure is not disrupted. The correct recombinant construct can sometimes give lighter blue colonies which may complicate its identification.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Ullmann, A.; Jacob, F.; Monod, J. (1967). "Characterization by in vitro complementation of a peptide corresponding to an operator-proximal segment of the beta-galactosidase structural gene of Escherichia coli". Journal of Molecular Biology. 24 (2): 339–343. doi:10.1016/0022-2836(67)90341-5. PMID 5339877.
  2. ^ Langley, K. E.; Villarejo, M. R.; Fowler, A. V.; Zamenhof, P. J.; Zabin, I. (1975). "Molecular basis of beta-galactosidase alpha-complementation". Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America. 72 (4): 1254–1257. Bibcode:1975PNAS...72.1254L. doi:10.1073/pnas.72.4.1254. PMC 432510. PMID 1093175.
  3. ^ Messing, J.; Gronenborn, B.; Müller-Hill, B.; Hans Hopschneider, P. (1977). "Filamentous coliphage M13 as a cloning vehicle: Insertion of a HindII fragment of the lac regulatory region in M13 replicative form in vitro". Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America. 74 (9): 3642–3646. Bibcode:1977PNAS...74.3642M. doi:10.1073/pnas.74.9.3642. PMC 431673. PMID 333444.
  4. ^ Vieira, J.; Messing, J. (1982). "The pUC plasmids, an M13mp7-derived system for insertion mutagenesis and sequencing with synthetic universal primers". Gene. 19 (3): 259–268. doi:10.1016/0378-1119(82)90015-4. PMID 6295879.
  5. ^ Joseph Sambrook, David Russell. "Chapter 1". Molecular Cloning - A Laboratory Manual. Vol. 1 (3rd ed.). p. 1.27. ISBN 978-0-87969-577-4.
  6. ^ J., Ninfa, Alexander (1998). Fundamental laboratory approaches for biochemistry and biotechnology. Ballou, David P. Bethesda, Md.: Fitzgerald Science Press. pp. 355–356. ISBN 1891786008. OCLC 38325074.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  7. ^ Speltz, Elizabeth B.; Regan, Lynne (June 2013). "White and green screening with circular polymerase extension cloning for easy and reliable cloning". Protein Science. 22 (6): 859–864. doi:10.1002/pro.2268. PMC 3690724. PMID 23592493.
  8. ^ Banerjee, Sampali; Kumar, Jitendra; Apte-Deshpande, Anjali; Padmanabhan, Sriram (2010-05-11). "A novel prokaryotic vector for identification and selection of recombinants: Direct use of the vector for expression studies in E. coli". Microbial Cell Factories. 9: 30. doi:10.1186/1475-2859-9-30. ISSN 1475-2859. PMC 2882348. PMID 20459760.
  9. ^ Banerjee, Sampali; Kumar, Jitendra; Apte-Deshpande, Anjali; Padmanabhan, Sriram (2010-05-11). "A novel prokaryotic vector for identification and selection of recombinants: Direct use of the vector for expression studies in E. coli". Microbial Cell Factories. 9: 30. doi:10.1186/1475-2859-9-30. ISSN 1475-2859. PMC 2882348. PMID 20459760.

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The blue white screen is a screening technique that allows for the rapid and convenient detection of recombinant bacteria in vector based molecular cloning experiments This method of screening is usually performed using a suitable bacterial strain but other organisms such as yeast may also be used DNA of transformation is ligated into a vector The vector is then inserted into a competent host cell viable for transformation which are then grown in the presence of X gal Cells transformed with vectors containing recombinant DNA will produce white colonies cells transformed with non recombinant plasmids i e only the vector grow into blue colonies An LB agar plate showing the result of a blue white screen Contents 1 Background 2 Molecular mechanism 3 Practical considerations 3 1 Drawbacks 4 See also 5 ReferencesBackground editMolecular cloning is one of the most commonly used procedures in molecular biology A gene of interest may be inserted into a plasmid vector via ligation and the plasmid is then transformed into Escherichia coli cells However not all the plasmids transformed into cells may contain the desired gene insert and checking each individual colony for the presence of the insert is time consuming Therefore a method for the detection of the insert would be useful for making this procedure less time and labor intensive One of the early methods developed for the detection of insert is blue white screening which allows for identification of successful products of cloning reactions through the colour of the bacterial colony The method is based on the principle of a complementation of the b galactosidase gene This phenomenon of a complementation was first demonstrated in work done by Agnes Ullmann in the laboratory of Francois Jacob and Jacques Monod where the function of an inactive mutant b galactosidase with deleted sequence was shown to be rescued by a fragment of b galactosidase in which that same sequence the a donor peptide is still intact 1 Langley et al showed that the mutant non functional b galactosidase was lacking in part of its N terminus with its residues 11 41 deleted but it may be complemented by a peptide formed of residues 3 90 of b galactosidase 2 M13 filamentous phage containing sequence coding for the first 145 amino acid was later constructed by Messing et al and a complementation via the use of a vector was demonstrated by the formation of blue plaques when cells containing the inactive protein were infected by the phage and then grown in plates containing X gal 3 The pUC series of plasmid cloning vectors by Vieira and Messing was developed from the M13 system and were the first plasmids constructed to take advantage of this screening method 4 In this method DNA ligated into the plasmid disrupts the a peptide and therefore the complementation process and no functional b galactosidase can form Cells transformed with plasmid containing an insert therefore form white colonies while cells transformed with plasmid without an insert form blue colonies result of a successful ligation can thus be easily identified by the white coloration of cells formed from the unsuccessful blue ones 5 Molecular mechanism edit nbsp A schematic representation of the blue white assay used to screen for recombinant vectorsb galactosidase is a protein encoded by the lacZ gene of the lac operon and it exists as a homotetramer in its active state However a mutant b galactosidase derived from the M15 strain of E coli has its N terminal residues 11 41 deleted and this mutant the w peptide is unable to form a tetramer and is inactive This mutant form of protein however may return fully to its active tetrameric state in the presence of an N terminal fragment of the protein the a peptide The rescue of function of the mutant b galactosidase by the a peptide is called a complementation In this method of screening the host E coli strain carries the lacZ deletion mutant lacZDM15 which contains the w peptide while the plasmids used carry the lacZa sequence which encodes the first 59 residues of b galactosidase the a peptide Neither is functional by itself However when the two peptides are expressed together as when a plasmid containing the lacZa sequence is transformed into a lacZDM15 cells they form a functional b galactosidase enzyme The blue white screening method works by disrupting this a complementation process The plasmid carries within the lacZa sequence an internal multiple cloning site MCS This MCS within the lacZa sequence can be cut by restriction enzymes so that the foreign DNA may be inserted within the lacZa gene thereby disrupting the gene that produces a peptide Consequently in cells containing the plasmid with an insert no functional b galactosidase may be formed The presence of an active b galactosidase can be detected by X gal a colourless analog of lactose that may be cleaved by b galactosidase to form 5 bromo 4 chloro indoxyl which then spontaneously dimerizes and oxidizes to form a bright blue insoluble pigment 5 5 dibromo 4 4 dichloro indigo This results in a characteristic blue colour in cells containing a functional b galactosidase Blue colonies therefore show that they may contain a vector with an uninterrupted lacZa therefore no insert while white colonies where X gal is not hydrolyzed indicate the presence of an insert in lacZa which disrupts the formation of an active b galactosidase The recombinant clones can be further analyzed by isolating and purifying small amounts of plasmid DNA from the transformed colonies and restriction enzymes can be used to cut the clone and determine if it has the fragment of interest 6 If the DNA is necessary to be sequenced the plasmids from the colonies will need to be isolated at a point whether to cut using restriction enzymes or performing other assays Practical considerations editThe correct type of vector and competent cells are important considerations when planning a blue white screen The plasmid must contain the lacZa and examples of such plasmids are pUC19 and pBluescript The E coli cell should contain the mutant lacZ gene with deleted sequence i e lacZDM15 and some of the commonly used cells with such genotype are JM109 DH5a and XL1 Blue It should also be understood that the lac operon is affected by the presence of glucose The protein EIIAGlc which is involved in glucose import shuts down lactose permease when glucose is being transported into the cell The media used in agar plate therefore should not include glucose X gal is light sensitive and therefore its solution and plates containing X gal should be stored in the dark Isopropyl b D 1 thiogalactopyranoside IPTG which functions as the inducer of the lac operon may be used in the media to enhance the expression of LacZ X gal is an expensive material thus other methods have been developed in order to screen bacteria GFP has been developed as an alternative to help screen bacteria The concept is similar to a complementation in which a DNA insert can disrupt the coding sequence within a vector and thus disrupt the GFP production resulting in non fluorescing bacteria 7 Bacteria that have recombinant vectors vector insert will be white and not express the GFP protein while non recombinant vector will and fluoresce under UV light GFP in general has been used as a reporter gene where individuals can definitively determine if a clone carries a gene that researchers are analyzing On occasion the medium in which the colonies grow can influence the screen and introduce false positive results 8 X gal on the medium can occasionally degrade to produce a blue color or GFP can lose its fluorescence because of the medium and can impact researchers capabilities to determine colonies with the desire recombinant and those that do not possess it 9 Drawbacks edit Some white colonies may not contain the desired recombinant plasmid for a number of reasons The ligated DNA may not be the correct one or not properly ligated and it is possible for some linearized vector to be transformed its ends repaired and ligated together such that no LacZa is produced and no blue colonies may be formed Mutation can also lead to the a fragment not being expressed A colony with no vector at all will also appear white and may sometimes appear as satellite colonies after the antibiotic used has been depleted It is also possible that blue colonies may contain the insert This occurs when the insert is in frame with the LacZa gene and a STOP codon is absent in the insert This can lead to the expression of a fusion protein that has a functional LacZa if its structure is not disrupted The correct recombinant construct can sometimes give lighter blue colonies which may complicate its identification See also edit nbsp Biology portalComplementation test pBLU pGreen pUC19 Recombinant DNAReferences edit Ullmann A Jacob F Monod J 1967 Characterization by in vitro complementation of a peptide corresponding to an operator proximal segment of the beta galactosidase structural gene of Escherichia coli Journal of Molecular Biology 24 2 339 343 doi 10 1016 0022 2836 67 90341 5 PMID 5339877 Langley K E Villarejo M R Fowler A V Zamenhof P J Zabin I 1975 Molecular basis of beta galactosidase alpha complementation Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 72 4 1254 1257 Bibcode 1975PNAS 72 1254L doi 10 1073 pnas 72 4 1254 PMC 432510 PMID 1093175 Messing J Gronenborn B Muller Hill B Hans Hopschneider P 1977 Filamentous coliphage M13 as a cloning vehicle Insertion of a HindII fragment of the lac regulatory region in M13 replicative form in vitro Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 74 9 3642 3646 Bibcode 1977PNAS 74 3642M doi 10 1073 pnas 74 9 3642 PMC 431673 PMID 333444 Vieira J Messing J 1982 The pUC plasmids an M13mp7 derived system for insertion mutagenesis and sequencing with synthetic universal primers Gene 19 3 259 268 doi 10 1016 0378 1119 82 90015 4 PMID 6295879 Joseph Sambrook David Russell Chapter 1 Molecular Cloning A Laboratory Manual Vol 1 3rd ed p 1 27 ISBN 978 0 87969 577 4 J Ninfa Alexander 1998 Fundamental laboratory approaches for biochemistry and biotechnology Ballou David P Bethesda Md Fitzgerald Science Press pp 355 356 ISBN 1891786008 OCLC 38325074 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Speltz Elizabeth B Regan Lynne June 2013 White and green screening with circular polymerase extension cloning for easy and reliable cloning Protein Science 22 6 859 864 doi 10 1002 pro 2268 PMC 3690724 PMID 23592493 Banerjee Sampali Kumar Jitendra Apte Deshpande Anjali Padmanabhan Sriram 2010 05 11 A novel prokaryotic vector for identification and selection of recombinants Direct use of the vector for expression studies in E coli Microbial Cell Factories 9 30 doi 10 1186 1475 2859 9 30 ISSN 1475 2859 PMC 2882348 PMID 20459760 Banerjee Sampali Kumar Jitendra Apte Deshpande Anjali Padmanabhan Sriram 2010 05 11 A novel prokaryotic vector for identification and selection of recombinants Direct use of the vector for expression studies in E coli Microbial Cell Factories 9 30 doi 10 1186 1475 2859 9 30 ISSN 1475 2859 PMC 2882348 PMID 20459760 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Blue white screen amp oldid 1188041255, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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