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<div class="main-content"> | <div class="main-content"> | ||
<div class="m-text-area"> | <div class="m-text-area"> | ||
− | <h1> | + | <h1>Interlab</h1> |
<div id="model-intro" class="m-block" > | <div id="model-intro" class="m-block" > | ||
<h2 class="m-subtitle">Overview</h2> | <h2 class="m-subtitle">Overview</h2> | ||
<img src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2017/0/06/Csmuxnchu_model_line_green.png" style="width: 60%; transform: translate(35%, -150%);"> | <img src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2017/0/06/Csmuxnchu_model_line_green.png" style="width: 60%; transform: translate(35%, -150%);"> | ||
− | <p> | + | <p>Reliable and repeatable measurement is a key component to all engineering disciplines. The same |
+ | holds true for synthetic biology, which has also been called engineering biology. However, the | ||
+ | ability to repeat measurements in different labs has been difficult. The Measurement Committee, | ||
+ | through the InterLab study, has been developing a robust measurement procedure for green | ||
+ | fluorescent protein (GFP) over the last several years. We chose GFP as the measurement marker | ||
+ | for this study since it's one of the most used markers in synthetic biology and, as a result, most | ||
+ | laboratories are equipped to measure this protein. | ||
+ | <p> | ||
+ | The aim to improve the measurement tools available to both the iGEM community and the synthetic | ||
+ | biology community as a whole. One of the big challenges in synthetic biology measurement has | ||
+ | been that fluorescence data usually cannot be compared because it has been reported in different | ||
+ | units or because different groups process data in different ways. Many have tried to work around | ||
+ | this using “relative expression” comparisons; however, being unable to directly compare | ||
+ | measurements makes it harder to debug engineered biological constructs, harder to effectively | ||
+ | share constructs between labs, and harder even to just interpret your experimental controls. | ||
+ | <p> | ||
+ | The InterLab protocol aims to address these issues by providing researchers with a detailed | ||
+ | protocol and data analysis form that yields absolute units for measurements of GFP in a plate | ||
+ | reader.<br></p> | ||
</div> | </div> | ||
− | <div id="parts-Material" class=" | + | <div id="parts-Material" class="Goal for the Fifth InterLab" > |
− | <h2 class="m-subtitle"> | + | <h2 class="m-subtitle">Goal for the Fifth InterLab</h2> |
<img src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2017/0/06/Csmuxnchu_model_line_green.png" style="width: 60%; transform: translate(35%, -150%);"> | <img src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2017/0/06/Csmuxnchu_model_line_green.png" style="width: 60%; transform: translate(35%, -150%);"> | ||
− | <p> | + | <p>The goal of the iGEM InterLab Study is to identify and correct the sources of systematic variability |
− | + | in synthetic biology measurements, so that eventually, measurements that are taken in different | |
+ | labs will be no more variable than measurements taken within the same lab. Until we reach this | ||
+ | point, synthetic biology will not be able to achieve its full potential as an engineering discipline, as | ||
+ | labs will not be able to reliably build upon others’ work. | ||
+ | <p> | ||
+ | In the previous interlab studies, it was shown that by measuring GFP expression in absolute | ||
+ | fluorescence units calibrated against a known concentration of fluorescent molecule can greatly | ||
+ | reduce the variability in measurements between labs. However, when taking bulk measurements of | ||
+ | a population of cells (such as with a plate reader), there is still a large source of variability in these | ||
+ | measurements: the number of cells in the sample. | ||
+ | <p> | ||
+ | Because the fluorescence value measured by a plate reader is an aggregate measurement of an | ||
+ | entire population of cells, we need to divide the total fluorescence by the number of cells in order to | ||
+ | determine the mean expression level of GFP per cell. Usually this is done by measuring the | ||
+ | absorbance of light at 600nm, from which the “optical density (OD)” of the sample is computed as | ||
+ | an approximation of the number of cells. OD measurements are subject to high variability between | ||
+ | labs, however, and it is unclear how good of an approximation an OD measurement actually is. If a | ||
+ | more direct method is used to determine the cell count in each sample, then potentially another | ||
+ | source of variability can be removed from the measurements. | ||
+ | <p> | ||
+ | This year, teams participating in the interlab study helped iGEM to answer the following | ||
+ | question: Can we reduce lab-to-lab variability in fluorescence measurements by normalizing to | ||
+ | absolute cell count or colony-forming units (CFUs) instead of OD? | ||
+ | <p> | ||
+ | In order to compute the cell count in the different teams samples, two orthogonal approaches were | ||
+ | be used: | ||
+ | <p> | ||
+ | 1. Converting between absorbance of cells to absorbance of a known concentration of beads. | ||
+ | <p> | ||
+ | Absorbance measurements use the way that a sample of cells in liquid scatter light in order | ||
+ | to approximate the concentration of cells in the sample. In this year’s Measurement Kit, | ||
+ | teams were provided with a sample containing silica beads that are roughly the same size | ||
+ | and shape as a typical E. coli cell, so that it should scatter light in a similar way. Because the | ||
+ | concentration of the beads is known, each lab’s absorbance measurements can be | ||
+ | converted into a universal, standard “equivalent concentration of beads” measurement. | ||
+ | <p> | ||
+ | 2. Counting colony-forming units (CFUs) from the sample. | ||
+ | <p> | ||
+ | A simple way to determine the number of cells in a sample of liquid media is to pour some out | ||
+ | on a plate and see how many colonies grow on the plate. Since each colony begins as a | ||
+ | |||
+ | single cell (for cells that do not stick together), we can determine how many live cells were in | ||
+ | the volume of media that we plated out and obtain a cell concentration for our sample as a | ||
+ | whole. Each team will have to determine the number of CFUs in positive and negative control | ||
+ | samples in order to compute a conversion factor from absorbance to CFU. | ||
+ | <p> | ||
+ | By using these two approaches, Interlab Measurement Study will be able to determine how much | ||
+ | they agree with each other, and whether using one (or both) can help to reduce lab-to-lab variability | ||
+ | in measurements. If it can, then together we will have brought synthetic biology one step closer to | ||
+ | becoming a true, reliable engineering discipline. | ||
<br></p> | <br></p> | ||
</div> | </div> | ||
− | <div id="parts-Result" class=" | + | <div id="parts-Result" class="Calibration Reference" > |
− | <h2 class="m-subtitle"> | + | <h2 class="m-subtitle">Calibration Reference</h2> |
<img src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2017/0/06/Csmuxnchu_model_line_green.png" style="width: 60%; transform: translate(35%, -150%);"> | <img src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2017/0/06/Csmuxnchu_model_line_green.png" style="width: 60%; transform: translate(35%, -150%);"> | ||
Revision as of 07:06, 11 September 2018