Abstract
AbstractSaccharomyces cerevisiaeis a powerful system for the expression of genome-wide or combinatorial libraries for diverse types of screening. However, expressing large libraries in yeast requires high-efficiency transformation and controlled expression. Transformation of yeast using electroporation methods is more efficient than chemical methods; however, protocols described for electroporation require large amounts of linearized plasmid DNA and often yield about 106cfu/µg of plasmid DNA. We optimized the electroporation of yeast cells for the expression of whole-genome libraries to yield up to 108cfu/µg plasmid DNA. The protocol generates sufficient transformants for 10-100x coverage of diverse genome libraries with small amounts of genomic libraries (0.1µg of DNA per reaction) and provides guidance on calculations to estimate library size coverage and transformation efficiency. It describes the preparation of electrocompetent yeast cells with lithium acetate and dithiothreitol conditioning step and the transformation of cells by electroporation with carrier DNA. We validated the protocol using three yeast surface display libraries and demonstrated using nanopore sequencing that libraries’ size and diversity are preserved. Moreover, expression analysis confirmed library functionality and the method’s efficacy. Hence, this protocol yields a sufficient representation of the genome of interest for downstream screening purposes while limiting the amount of the genomic library required.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Cited by
1 articles.
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