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Kroos and Yu Supplemental Information

Primers for QuickChange (Stratagene) Site-directed Mutagenesis of spoIVFB.

Substitution Primer Sequence
E44Q LK245
LK246
5' GATTGTATTGATTCATCAGCTGGGGCATGCTGC 3' a
5' GCAGCATGCCCCAGCTGATGAATCAATACAATC 3'
E44A LK247
LK248
5' GATTGTATTGATTCATGCGCTGGGGCATGCTGC 3'
5' GCAGCATGCCCCAGCGCATGAATCAATACAATC 3'
E44D LK249
LK250
5' GATTGTATTGATTCATGACCTGGGGCATGCTGC 3'
5' GCAGCATGCCCCAGGTCATGAATCAATACAATC 3'
I42P LK251
LK252
5' GCTCCTGATTGTATTGCCTCATGAGCTGGGGC 3'
5' GCCCCAGCTCATGAGGCAATACAATCAGGAGC 3'
D137H LK253
LK254
5' CGATCTGGCCGCTGCATGGAGGAAAACTG 3'
5' CAGTTTTCCTCCATGCAGCGGCCAGATCG 3'
D137N LK255
LK256
5' CGATCTGGCCGCTGAATGGAGGAAAACTG 3'
5' CAGTTTTCCTCCATTCAGCGGCCAGATCG 3'

a Underlining indicates the mutagenic nucleotide(s).

 


Site-directed mutagenesis of spoIVFB using sequence-overlap extension (SOE).

SOE employs 2 rounds of PCR to generate mutations in the desired position of the gene. The protocol was as follows: (see the diagram)

The first round of PCR: Plasmid pSL16 (100 ng ) was used as the template. Two external primers (flanking spoIVFB) and two internal primers (each containing a mutated nucleotide) were used to generate PCR products 1 and 2 in separate reactions. The primers were designed to create an overlap region in the two PCR fragments. To reduce the chance of making undesired mutations during the PCR, DNA polymerase Pfu ( Stratagene) was used in this step. The thermal cycling conditions were 94° C for 3 min; 30 cycles of 94° C for 1 min, 50°C for 1 min, and 72°C for 2 min; 72°C for 10 min. The first round PCR products were then purified by gel-extraction (Promega).

The second round of PCR: Purified PCR products 1 and 2 (100 ng each) served as templates. The two external primers were used to amplify the full-length SOE product. The above PCR conditions were modified slightly: Taq DNA polymerase was used for 25 cycles of amplification. Half of the PCR products are expected to contain the mutation in Primer 2 (see diagram) and the other half contain the mutation in Primer 3 (not shown in the diagram).

The final SOE products were cut with HindIII and SalI restriction enzymes, and the 1.0-kbp fragments containing the full-length spoIVFB gene were then ligated to HindIII-SalI-pDG148 to create mutant versions of pSL16.

Substitution Primer 1 Primer 2 Primer 3 Primer 4
D137A
D137E
H43F
H47F
LK152
LK152
LK152
LK152
LK140
LK160
LK178
LK180
LK161
LK161
LK179
LK181
LK153
LK153
LK153
LK153

 

Primer Sequence Mutation
LK140 5’GGCCGCTGGCTGGAGGAAA3’ SpoIVFBD137A
LK160 5’GGCCGCTGGAAGGAGGAAAA3’ SpoIVFBD137E
LK178 5’TGTATTGATTTTTGAGCTGGGGCA3’ SpoIVFBH43F
LK180 5’CATGAGCTGGGGTTTGCTGCTCTGGC3’ SpoIVFBH47F
LK161 5’GAAAAGGCAGCTATTTGGAAAAC3’ SpoIVFB1-148
LK179 5’TGCCCCAGCTCAGCAATCAATACAAT3’ SpoIVFBH43A
LK181 5’GCCAGAGCAGCAGCCCCCAGCTCATG3’ SpoIVFBH47A
LK152 5’AGTGGTCAAGACCTCACTAG3’  
LK153 5’CGGAATTAGCTTGCATGCCT3’  

 

The final PCR product was gel-purified and cut with HindIII and SalI. The fragment was ligated to HindIII-SalI-digested pDG148 to create mutant versions of pSL1G

Generation of anti-SpoIVFB antiserum and affinity purification of antibodies.

A 292-bp DNA fragment generated by the polymerase chain reaction with pSC224 [Cutting, 1991 #484] as the template using upstream primer 5' GGCATATGGAGGAATATCGGCAAAGG 3' (NdeI site is underlined) and downstream primer 5' GCGGATCCTTAGTAGGGCAGAAGCAGTTCCTC 3' (BamHI site is underlined) was digested with NdeI and BamHI, and ligated to NdeI-BamHI-digested pET16b (Novagen), resulting in pSL28a, in which the last 92 amino acid residues of SpoIVFB are preceded by 10 histidines under the control of a T7 RNAP promoter. The fusion protein was expressed in E. coli BL21 lDE3/pLysS (Novagen) by adding IPTG (1 mM) when the culture reached the late log phase of growth and continuing incubation for 3 h at 37°C. Proteins were separated by SDS-PAGE, the His10-SpoIVFB197-288 chimera was sliced from the gel, and electroeluted protein was injected into rabbits to generate an antiserum.

To affinity purify anti-SpoIVFB antibodies, the His10-SpoIVFB197-288 fusion protein was purified and used to create an affinity column. Cells from a culture (150 ml) induced to produce the fusion protein as described above were resuspended in 5 ml buffer A (40 mM sodium phosphate pH 8.0, 6 M guanidine-HCl, 0.5 M NaCl) and stirred for 2 h at 25°C. The lysate was centrifuged at 12,000 g for 15 min at 4°C and the supernatant was mixed with 3 ml of a 50% suspension of Ni-NTA-agarose (Qiagen) in buffer A. The mixture was loaded into a column, which was then washed with 10 volumes of buffer B (40 mM sodium phosphate pH 8.0, 6 M urea, 0.5 M NaCl) followed by 10 volumes of buffer C (buffer B at pH 6.2), and proteins were eluted with buffer D (buffer B at pH 4.7). Eluted proteins were concentrated 4-fold by centrifuging in a Centrex UF-2 ultrafilter (Schleicher & Schuell) and dialyzed against buffer E (20 mM sodium phosphate pH 7.1, 3 M guanidine-HCl, 0.5 M NaCl). The fusion protein was coupled to Affigel-10 (Bio-Rad Laboratories) and a 20 ml column was used to affinity purify the polyclonal antiserum as described previously [Resnekov, 1996 #708] except the column was washed with at least 40 volumes of 10 mM Tris-HCl pH 7.5 and 40 volumes of the same buffer plus 0.5 M NaCl until no protein was detectable in the eluate by the Bradford assay [Bradford, 1976 #478]. Antibodies were eluted from the column using 0.2 M glycine, 1 mM EDTA pH 2.2 and immediately neutralized by adding 0.5 volume of 2 M Tris-HCl pH 8.5.


1. Cutting, S., S. Roels, and R. Losick. 1991. Sporulation operon spoIVF and the characterization of mutations that uncouple mother-cell from forespore gene expression in Bacillus subtilis. J. Mol. Biol. 221:1237-1256.

2. Resnekov, O., S. Alper, and R. Losick. 1996. Subcellular localization of proteins governing the proteolytic activation of a developmental transcription factor in Bacillus subtilis. Genes Cells 1:529-542.

3. Bradford, M. 1976. A rapid and sensitive method for the quantitation of microgram quantities of protein utilizing the principle of protein-dye binding. Anal. Biochem. 72:248-254.