b-Galactosidase Activity Assay -- Marian
Price-Carter, 9/7/00
Day 1: Start overnight cultures in assay medium.
Negative control: cells lacking b-galactosidase, such as LT2; positive
control: cells with high enzyme activity.
Day 2: Dilute cells 1/100 in fresh medium, grow to
mid-log.1 Prepare solutions: Z buffer, phosphate buffer,
ONPG2.
Preparation of Cells
Incubate cultures 20' on ice to stop growth and wash:
- Pellet at least 2 mL of cells at 4 C by
centrifuging 10' at 6,000 rpm in a Sorval SS34 rotor.
- Pour off the supernatant.
- Resuspend the cell pellet in the same volume
of chilled Z buffer.
- Measure the OD600 of the
resuspended cells (blank against Z buffer)
Dilute cells in Z buffer to 1 mL (most easily
done with a pippeter). For most activities, 0.5 mL cells + 0.5 mL Z
buffer will produce a desirable amount of yellow color in 1-2
hours. For higher levels (>500 Miller units), try 0.1 mL cells +
0.9 mL Z buffer.
Permeabilize the diluted cells by adding 100 µl chloroform
and 50 µl 0.1% SDS (sodium dodecyl sulfate, sodium laurel
sulfate). Chloroform is easier to pippete if the air in the pippete
tip is saturated by drawing up and releasing chloroform several
times.
Vortex; equilibrate the tubes 5' in a 28 C water bath.
Assay
Start reaction by adding 0.2 mL substrate,
o-nitrophenyl-b-D-galactoside
(ONPG; 4 mg/mL)
- Vortex - Record the time of addition
precisely with timer or stopwatch.
- Incubate the cells at 28 C.
- Stop the reaction after sufficient yellow
color has developed3 by adding 0.5 mL 1M
Na2CO34.
- Vortex. - Note time of addition
precisely.
- Transfer 1 mL to an eppendorf tube, spin 5'
at maximum to remove debris and chloroform.
- Record the optical density at 420 nm and at
550 nm for each tube. 5
- Calculate the units of
activity6.
This is basically the assay described by J.H.
Miller in "Experiments in Molecular Genetics" 1972 Cold Spring
Harbor Laboratories pages 352-355, with an extra step added. In the
assay described here, the cells are pelleted and resuspended in
assay buffer (Z buffer) to eliminate error due to the effects of
different carbon sources in the growth medium on the b-galactosidase enzyme activity.
b-Galactosidase is able to hydrolyze
(cleave) b-D-galactosides. This enzyme
facilitates growth on carbon sources like lactose by cleaving it
into a molecule of glucose and a molecule of galactose which the
cells can catabolize and grow on. In the assay described above, the
substrate o-nitrophenyl-b-D-galactopyraniside (ONPG) is used in place of
lactose. When the b-galactosidase
cleaves ONPG, o-nitrophenol is released. This compound has a yellow
color, and absorbs 420 nm light. To measure b-galactosidase activity the accumulation of yellow
color (increase 420 nm absorbance)/minute is monitored.
Footnotes
1 In Salmonella (which is naturally b-galactosidase minus) this assay is used to
monitor transcription from insertion elements (that encode the
b-galactosidase enzyme) that have
inserted into different genes. The assay is usually performed on
cells in the mid-log phase of growth. On rich carbon sources like
glucose, the OD600 of a culture of wild-type
Salmonella in mid-log phase ranges from 0.28-0.7. On poorer
carbon sources or in strains that have mutations in genes that are
important for growth, the OD600 at mid-log phase may be
lower, since the cells may enter stationary phase at a lower
density. Therefore, before doing the assay, it is important to
follow the growth of the strain of interest in each type of medium
that will be used, plot a growth curve, and determine when the
cells are in mid-log phase in that particular medium.
2 Solutions for b-galactosidase assays
Z buffer, per 50 mL:
- O.80g Na2HPO4.7H2O (0.06M)
- 0.28g NaH2PO4.H2O (0.04M)
- 0.5 mL 1M KCl (0.01M)
- 0.05 mL 1M
MgSO4 (0.001M)
- 0.135 mL b
-mercaptoethanol (BME) (0.05M)
- bring to approximately 40 mL with
H2O, dissolve all the salts
- adjust the pH to 7.0
- use a graduated cylinder to bring the buffer
to 50 mL
- store at 4 C.
Note: BME is added to the reaction buffer
to stabilize the b-galactosidase enzyme.
The important part of BME is a reactive thiol (SH group). Thiols
react with oxygen in the air and oxidize (inactivate) over time.
Therefore, try not to make much more Z buffer than you will use in
a few days. Store the unused portion at 4 C.
ONPG should be dissolved fresh each day. Dissolve 1.5X as much as
you think you will need, because you may have to repeat one or more
of the assays i.e. for a different amount of time or with a
different cell dilution. Dissolve the ONPG to a final concentration
of 4mg/mL in 0.1M phosphate buffer pH 7.0.
Phosphate buffer, per 100 mL:
- 1.61g
Na2HPO4.7H2O (0.06M)
- 0.55g
NaH2PO4.H2O (0.04M)
- adjust the pH to 7.0
- phosphate buffer is stable at room
temperature and does not need to be made fresh each
time.
3 What is sufficient yellow
color? To get the most accurate measure of activity, the absorbance
at 420 nm (A420) should range from 0.6 to 0.9. Readings
as low as 0.1 and as high as 1.2 are acceptable. Tubes that have
become as yellow as a tube of (unused) LB broth will probably be
sufficiently yellow.
If the reading is too low, try the assay again with more cells or
longer incubation time. When the element has inserted into a gene
that is not expressed much, it will probably take hours to develop
enough yellow color. If your negative control starts to turn yellow
(after several or more hours) it means that the substrate is
beginning to auto-hydrolyze. The assay can be left overnight. The
auto-hydrolysis is then accounted for by subtracting the
A420 and A500 of the negative control from
that of the tests before doing any further calculations.
If the reading is too high, try the assay again with fewer cells.
Aim to stop the reaction after 15 minutes. For example, if in your
first attempt, you added 0.5 mL of cells + 0.5 mL of Z buffer, and
it was too yellow after 5 minutes, try adding 0.1 mL cells + 0.9 mL
of Z buffer. Watch the tube carefully. Some cultures may have to be
diluted even further!
4 Adding the 1 M Na2CO3
stops the reaction by raising the pH of the solution to 11. At this
pH the enzyme is not active.
5 The reading at 420 nm is a combination of
absorbance by o-nitrophenol and light scattering by cell debris.
The absorbance at 550 corrects for light scattering. There is no
absorbance from o-nitrophenol at this wavelength. The light
scattering at 420 nm is proportional to that at 550 nm:
light scattering
at 420 nm = 1.75 x OD550
6 Use the following equation
to calculate units of enzyme activity:
Miller Units =
1000 x [(OD420 - 1.75 x OD550)] / (T x V x
OD600)
- OD420 and OD550 are
read from the reaction mixture.
- OD600 reflects cell density in
the washed cell suspension.
- T = time of the reaction in
minutes.
- V = volume of culture used in the assay in
mLs.
The units give the change in A420/min/mL of
cells/OD600
Typical values:
a fully induced
lac+ operon (+IPTG) = 1500 units
an uniduced lac+ operon (no IPTG) = 1.5-3 units