Difference between revisions of "Team:Vilnius-Lithuania/Design"

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         <h1>Selection system</h1>
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         <h1>Selection system</h1><p></p>
         <h5>Split antibiotic – 2 plasmids system</h5>
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         <h2>Split antibiotic – 2 plasmids system</h2>
 
         <p>One of the essential parts of synthetic biology are plasmids. However, bacterial plasmid systems require a unique selection, usually an antibiotic resistance gene, to stably maintain the plasmids. As the number of different plasmid groups used in a single cell rise, the need for more selection markers grows. In addition to raising the issue of biosafety, the use of multiple antibiotic resistance genes destabilizes the functionality of the cells. To address this problem a protein granting the resistance to aminoglycoside family antibiotics, called amino 3'-glycosyl phosphotransferase (APH(3')), was split into two subunits by Calvin M. Schmidt et al. </p><p>
 
         <p>One of the essential parts of synthetic biology are plasmids. However, bacterial plasmid systems require a unique selection, usually an antibiotic resistance gene, to stably maintain the plasmids. As the number of different plasmid groups used in a single cell rise, the need for more selection markers grows. In addition to raising the issue of biosafety, the use of multiple antibiotic resistance genes destabilizes the functionality of the cells. To address this problem a protein granting the resistance to aminoglycoside family antibiotics, called amino 3'-glycosyl phosphotransferase (APH(3')), was split into two subunits by Calvin M. Schmidt et al. </p><p>
 
According to the obscure guidelines we split an unmodified neo gene sequence between 59 and 60 amino acid residues. Two subunits were termed α-neo and β-neo. Furthermore, we added additional termination codon at the end of an α-neo fragment for the translation to stop. No other start codons were included into the β-neo subunit as the gene was designed for toehold switch system. Despite the fact that β-neo subunit had no start codon, the split antibiotic system worked perfectly when coupled with a standard promoter and a ribosome binding site (BBa_K608002). Consequently, a split antibiotic resistance gene provides a selection system to stably maintain two different plasmids.
 
According to the obscure guidelines we split an unmodified neo gene sequence between 59 and 60 amino acid residues. Two subunits were termed α-neo and β-neo. Furthermore, we added additional termination codon at the end of an α-neo fragment for the translation to stop. No other start codons were included into the β-neo subunit as the gene was designed for toehold switch system. Despite the fact that β-neo subunit had no start codon, the split antibiotic system worked perfectly when coupled with a standard promoter and a ribosome binding site (BBa_K608002). Consequently, a split antibiotic resistance gene provides a selection system to stably maintain two different plasmids.
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        <h2>H2 title</h2>
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         <p>Although the linker sequence adds additional 10 amino acid residues to the peptide, we reasoned that it will not affect the function of split antibiotic. Toehold switches are unlocked when an RNA trigger binds to the 5’ end of the toehold and initiates RNA duplex formation, which releases the locked RBS and reveals linker start codon. We concluded, that if the toehold sequences were added in front of α- and β-neo gene fragments, the translation would require trigger RNA to initiate protein synthesis.</p><p>
 
         <p>Although the linker sequence adds additional 10 amino acid residues to the peptide, we reasoned that it will not affect the function of split antibiotic. Toehold switches are unlocked when an RNA trigger binds to the 5’ end of the toehold and initiates RNA duplex formation, which releases the locked RBS and reveals linker start codon. We concluded, that if the toehold sequences were added in front of α- and β-neo gene fragments, the translation would require trigger RNA to initiate protein synthesis.</p><p>
 
Toeholds and their corresponding triggers design sequences were used as described by A. A. Green et al. with some modifications. First of all, it is important to note, that a “scar” which is made between biobrick prefix for protein coding sequences and suffix, contains a termination codon at the 3’ end. Therefore, it was necessary to use the other form of prefix for α- and β-neo genes, as the translation proceeds from one biobrick to another. Furthermore, seeing that the “scar” produced when joining two biobricks is 8 base pairs, we included an additional T nucleotide at the end of linker sequence to ensure the translation stays in frame to the α- and β-neo genes. We constructed a system, which includes two toehold riboregulators (termed toehold 1 and toehold 2) upstream of α- and β-neo genes in two different plasmids. The corresponding activating RNA triggers (name trigger 1 and trigger 2) were placed into additional two plasmids under constant expression. All the parts used together complete a 4-plasmid selection system - two distinct trigger RNAs are expressed by two different plasmids in order to unlock the translation of toehold controlled α- and β-neo peptides to form a complete amino 3'-glycosyl phosphotransferase. For this reason, if one plasmid is lost, the end product – α/β dimer APH(3') is not formed, therefore bacteria lose their antibiotic resistance.
 
Toeholds and their corresponding triggers design sequences were used as described by A. A. Green et al. with some modifications. First of all, it is important to note, that a “scar” which is made between biobrick prefix for protein coding sequences and suffix, contains a termination codon at the 3’ end. Therefore, it was necessary to use the other form of prefix for α- and β-neo genes, as the translation proceeds from one biobrick to another. Furthermore, seeing that the “scar” produced when joining two biobricks is 8 base pairs, we included an additional T nucleotide at the end of linker sequence to ensure the translation stays in frame to the α- and β-neo genes. We constructed a system, which includes two toehold riboregulators (termed toehold 1 and toehold 2) upstream of α- and β-neo genes in two different plasmids. The corresponding activating RNA triggers (name trigger 1 and trigger 2) were placed into additional two plasmids under constant expression. All the parts used together complete a 4-plasmid selection system - two distinct trigger RNAs are expressed by two different plasmids in order to unlock the translation of toehold controlled α- and β-neo peptides to form a complete amino 3'-glycosyl phosphotransferase. For this reason, if one plasmid is lost, the end product – α/β dimer APH(3') is not formed, therefore bacteria lose their antibiotic resistance.

Revision as of 14:10, 1 November 2017

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Plasmid copy number control

Design

Flexible copy number control is the core of our framework, which is based on re-engineered ColE1 origin of replicon.

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