The RA's gone off on a short but well-earned trip to the sun, and before she left she made the H. influenzae hfq knockout I've been waiting for. So yesterday, after clicking 'Submit' on our NSERC grant proposal, I did competence time courses of wildtype cells and the mutant, hoping to see a difference in transformation frequencies (preferably a decrease).
You can read all the background in this post from last March. And here's a hexameric structure for Hfq (from Wikipedia):
The colonies are still too tiny to count, but it looks like the transformation frequency is down about 10-fold in the mutant!
Next step, make some DNA from the mutant so I can introduce the mutation into my hypercompetent mutant backgrounds.
What we can say about Google and 2024 Nobel Prizes
20 hours ago in Doc Madhattan
Hey Rosie, have you seen this yet?
ReplyDeleteThe molecular basis of phosphate discrimination in arsenate-rich environments
If it's not too late, I've got some DNA you could use...
ReplyDeletewould you mind send me the protocol for hfq mutant.
ReplyDelete