This video demonstrates an in vivo assay in bacteria to study the interaction of RNA-binding proteins (RBPs) with RNA. The bacterial cells are transformed with two plasmid constructs — a binding-site plasmid encoding an mRNA containing a fluorescent reporter gene downstream of an RBP-binding site — while an RBP plasmid expresses the RBP proteins under the control of an inducer. Upon inducer-mediated increase in RBP production, the RBPs bind to the mRNA, resulting in translational repression of the reporter via inhibition of ribosome binding.
Protocol
1. System Preparation Design of binding-site plasmids Design the binding site cassette as depicted in Figure 1. Each minigene contains the following parts (5' to 3'): Eagl restriction site, ∼40 bases of the 5' end of the kanamycin (Kan) resistance gene, pLac-Ara promoter, ribosome binding site (RBS), AUG of the mCherry gene, a spacer (δ), an RBP binding site, 80 bases of the 5' end of the mCherry gene, and an ApaLI restr…
Representative Results
Figure 1: Overview of system design and cloning steps. Illustration of the cassette design for the binding site plasmid (left) and RBP-mCerulean plasmid (right). The next step is consecutive transformations of both plasmids into competent E. coli cells, with RBP plasmids first. Double-transformants are then tested for their mCherry expression levels in increasing inducer concentrations; …