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{"title":"Rapid and Efficient Synthetic Assembly of Multiplex Luciferase Reporter Plasmids for the Simultaneous Monitoring of Up to Six Cellular Signaling Pathways.","authors":"Alejandro Sarrion-Perdigones, Yezabel Gonzalez, Koen J T Venken","doi":"10.1002/cpmb.121","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<p><p>High-throughput cell-based screening assays are valuable tools in the discovery of chemical probes and therapeutic agents. Such assays are designed to examine the effects of small compounds on targets, pathways, or phenotypes participating in normal and disease processes. While most cell-based assays measure single quantities, multiplexed assays seek to address these limitations by obtaining multiple simultaneous measurements. The signals from such measurements should be independently detectable and cover large dynamic ranges. Luciferases are good candidates for generation of such signals. They are genetically encoded, versatile, and cost-effective, and their output signals can be sensitively detected. We recently developed a multiplex luciferase assay that allows monitoring the activity of five experimental pathways against one control simultaneously. We used synthetic assembly cloning to assemble all six luciferase reporter units into a single vector over eight stitching rounds. Because all six reporters are on a single piece of DNA, a single vector ensures stoichiometric ratios of each transcriptional unit in each transfected cell, resulting in lower experimental variation. Our proof-of-concept multiplex hextuple luciferase assay was designed to simultaneously monitor the p53, TGF-β, NF-κβ, c-Myc, and MAPK/JNK signaling pathways. The same synthetic assembly cloning pipeline allows the stitching of numerous other cellular pathway luciferase reporters. Here we present an improved three-step synthetic assembly protocol to quickly and efficiently generate multiplex hextuple luciferase reporter plasmids for other signaling pathways of interest. This improved assembly protocol provides the opportunity to analyze any five desired pathways at once much more quickly. Protocols are provided on how to prepare DNA components and destination vector plasmids, design synthetic DNA, perform assembly cloning of new transcriptional reporter elements, implement multipartite synthetic assembly cloning of single-pathway luciferase reporters, and carry out one-step assembly of final multiplex hextuple luciferase vectors. We present protocols on how to perform multiplex hextuple luciferase in an accompanying Current Protocols in Molecular Biology article. © 2020 Wiley Periodicals LLC. Basic Protocol 1: Preparation of DNA parts and destination vectors for synthetic assembly cloning Basic Protocol 2: DNA synthesis and assembly cloning of a typical transcriptional reporter element Alternate Protocol: DNA synthesis and assembly cloning of a challenging transcriptional reporter element Basic Protocol 3: Multipartite synthetic assembly cloning of individual pathway luciferase reporters Basic Protocol 4: One step assembly into final multiplex hextuple luciferase vectors Support Protocol: Generation of home-made chemocompetent E. coli DH10B-T1R cells.</p>","PeriodicalId":10734,"journal":{"name":"Current Protocols in Molecular Biology","volume":"131 1","pages":"e121"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2020-06-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://sci-hub-pdf.com/10.1002/cpmb.121","citationCount":"8","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Current Protocols in Molecular Biology","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1002/cpmb.121","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q2","JCRName":"Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology","Score":null,"Total":0}
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Abstract
High-throughput cell-based screening assays are valuable tools in the discovery of chemical probes and therapeutic agents. Such assays are designed to examine the effects of small compounds on targets, pathways, or phenotypes participating in normal and disease processes. While most cell-based assays measure single quantities, multiplexed assays seek to address these limitations by obtaining multiple simultaneous measurements. The signals from such measurements should be independently detectable and cover large dynamic ranges. Luciferases are good candidates for generation of such signals. They are genetically encoded, versatile, and cost-effective, and their output signals can be sensitively detected. We recently developed a multiplex luciferase assay that allows monitoring the activity of five experimental pathways against one control simultaneously. We used synthetic assembly cloning to assemble all six luciferase reporter units into a single vector over eight stitching rounds. Because all six reporters are on a single piece of DNA, a single vector ensures stoichiometric ratios of each transcriptional unit in each transfected cell, resulting in lower experimental variation. Our proof-of-concept multiplex hextuple luciferase assay was designed to simultaneously monitor the p53, TGF-β, NF-κβ, c-Myc, and MAPK/JNK signaling pathways. The same synthetic assembly cloning pipeline allows the stitching of numerous other cellular pathway luciferase reporters. Here we present an improved three-step synthetic assembly protocol to quickly and efficiently generate multiplex hextuple luciferase reporter plasmids for other signaling pathways of interest. This improved assembly protocol provides the opportunity to analyze any five desired pathways at once much more quickly. Protocols are provided on how to prepare DNA components and destination vector plasmids, design synthetic DNA, perform assembly cloning of new transcriptional reporter elements, implement multipartite synthetic assembly cloning of single-pathway luciferase reporters, and carry out one-step assembly of final multiplex hextuple luciferase vectors. We present protocols on how to perform multiplex hextuple luciferase in an accompanying Current Protocols in Molecular Biology article. © 2020 Wiley Periodicals LLC. Basic Protocol 1: Preparation of DNA parts and destination vectors for synthetic assembly cloning Basic Protocol 2: DNA synthesis and assembly cloning of a typical transcriptional reporter element Alternate Protocol: DNA synthesis and assembly cloning of a challenging transcriptional reporter element Basic Protocol 3: Multipartite synthetic assembly cloning of individual pathway luciferase reporters Basic Protocol 4: One step assembly into final multiplex hextuple luciferase vectors Support Protocol: Generation of home-made chemocompetent E. coli DH10B-T1R cells.
多重荧光素酶报告质粒的快速高效合成,可同时监测多达六个细胞信号通路。
基于细胞的高通量筛选试验是发现化学探针和治疗剂的宝贵工具。此类检测旨在检查小化合物对参与正常和疾病过程的靶标、途径或表型的影响。虽然大多数基于细胞的分析测量单个数量,但多路分析通过获得多个同时测量来解决这些限制。来自这些测量的信号应该是可独立检测的,并且覆盖很大的动态范围。荧光素酶是产生这种信号的良好候选者。它们是基因编码的,用途广泛,成本效益高,并且它们的输出信号可以被敏感地检测到。我们最近开发了一种多重荧光素酶测定方法,可以同时监测五种实验途径对一种对照物的活性。我们使用合成组装克隆技术将所有6个荧光素酶报告单元组装成一个载体,经过8轮拼接。由于所有6个报告基因都位于单个DNA片段上,因此单个载体确保了每个转染细胞中每个转录单位的化学计量比,从而降低了实验变异。我们的概念验证型多重六元荧光素酶测定被设计用于同时监测p53、TGF-β、NF-κβ、c-Myc和MAPK/JNK信号通路。相同的合成组装克隆管道允许拼接许多其他细胞途径荧光素酶报告基因。在这里,我们提出了一种改进的三步合成组装方案,以快速有效地为其他感兴趣的信号通路生成多重六元荧光素酶报告质粒。这种改进的装配协议提供了一次更快地分析任何五个所需途径的机会。提供了如何制备DNA组分和目的载体质粒,设计合成DNA,对新的转录报告元件进行组装克隆,对单途径荧光素酶报告基因进行多部分合成组装克隆,并对最终的多重六元荧光素酶载体进行一步组装的方案。我们在分子生物学文章中提出了如何执行多重六元荧光素酶的协议。©2020 Wiley期刊有限责任公司基本方案1:合成组装克隆的DNA部分和目的载体的制备基本方案2:典型转录报告元件的DNA合成和组装克隆备用方案:具有挑战性的转录报告元件的DNA合成和组装克隆基本方案3:单个途径荧光素酶报告元件的多部合成组装克隆基本方案4:一步组装成最终的多重六元荧光素酶载体支持方案:产生自制的具有化学活性的大肠杆菌DH10B-T1R细胞。
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