Drug Discovery 2017
Poster
86

Genetically encoded biosensor monitors redox processes in yeast colonies in response to changing oxygen environments

Objective

Yeast is a popular model organism because it is easy to genetically modify and robust to differing environments. Yeast can be studied under aerobic conditions when plated on agar plates. The Singer Instruments ROTOR device pins colonies of yeast, fungi or bacteria onto agar plates in 96, 384 or 1536 plate format and enables to study colonies in high-throughput. Here, different yeast clones were pinned onto a plate resembling a 384-well plate to determine the organism's response to varying oxygen concentrations. These concentrations were generated in the CLARIOstar measurement chamber by its atmospheric control unit (ACU). The microplate reader detected differences in yeast autofluorescence, citrate synthase 2 expression reported by mCherry and a redox-sensitive roGFP2-based probe. RoGFPs are redox sensitive green fluorescent proteins that can be made to respond to specific redox species via the genetic fusion of appropriate redox enzymes.          

supporting document

Hosted By

ELRIG

The European Laboratory Research & Innovation Group Our Vision : To provide outstanding, leading edge knowledge to the life sciences community on an open access basis

Get the App

Get this event information on your mobile by
going to the Apple or Google Store and search for 'myEventflo'
iPhone App
Android App
www.myeventflo.com/2038