Difference between revisions of "Team:Newcastle/Results"

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           <p>Expression of the <i>E. coli</i> type 1 fimbriae gene is tightly regulated and phase dependent, i.e expression is either completely [ON] or [OFF] (Klemm., 1986). This change in expression is controlled by the action of two proteins <i>FimB</i> and <i>FimE</i> which independently act upon a 300bp promoter region upstream of the fimbriae gene.  The 300bp promoter region is inverted to either activate or suppress expression (McClain <I>et</I> al., 1991). Typical gene regulation mechanisms rely on up or down regulation of a promoter from a baseline expression, the fimbriae mechanism of ‘ALL’ or ‘NONE’ makes it a useful tool for synthetic biology applications.  While the <i>FimB</i> protein inverts the promoter back and forth between [ON] and [OFF] states the <i>FimE</i> protein permanently inverts the promoter from [ON] to [OFF].  This inversion can be used to amplify weak or inconsistent induction signals.<br/><br/>
 
           <p>Expression of the <i>E. coli</i> type 1 fimbriae gene is tightly regulated and phase dependent, i.e expression is either completely [ON] or [OFF] (Klemm., 1986). This change in expression is controlled by the action of two proteins <i>FimB</i> and <i>FimE</i> which independently act upon a 300bp promoter region upstream of the fimbriae gene.  The 300bp promoter region is inverted to either activate or suppress expression (McClain <I>et</I> al., 1991). Typical gene regulation mechanisms rely on up or down regulation of a promoter from a baseline expression, the fimbriae mechanism of ‘ALL’ or ‘NONE’ makes it a useful tool for synthetic biology applications.  While the <i>FimB</i> protein inverts the promoter back and forth between [ON] and [OFF] states the <i>FimE</i> protein permanently inverts the promoter from [ON] to [OFF].  This inversion can be used to amplify weak or inconsistent induction signals.<br/><br/>
 
Since the part we are making is designed to amplify a weak signal which can then be detected by a downstream ‘reporter’ cell the quorum sensing system from P. aeruginosa was adapted to allow for signal transfer between cells.  The <i>rhlI</i> gene from P. aeruginosa produces the quorum sensing molecule N-butyryl-AHL (C4-AHL) (Parsek et al.,2000),  this molecule is membrane permeable and able to induce expression of a promoter upstream of sfGFP in another cell.<br/><br/>
 
Since the part we are making is designed to amplify a weak signal which can then be detected by a downstream ‘reporter’ cell the quorum sensing system from P. aeruginosa was adapted to allow for signal transfer between cells.  The <i>rhlI</i> gene from P. aeruginosa produces the quorum sensing molecule N-butyryl-AHL (C4-AHL) (Parsek et al.,2000),  this molecule is membrane permeable and able to induce expression of a promoter upstream of sfGFP in another cell.<br/><br/>
<a href="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/parts/b/b1/--T--Newcastle--MP--Protocol--Fim--96.pdf">BBa_K2205005 (New)</a>
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<a href="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/parts/b/b1/--T--Newcastle--MP--Protocol--Fim--96.pdf">Fim 96 Plate assay Protocol</a>
 
<img class="FIM" style="width:100%" src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2017/a/a4/T--Newcastle--MP_FimON-OFF_diagram.jpeg"/>
 
<img class="FIM" style="width:100%" src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2017/a/a4/T--Newcastle--MP_FimON-OFF_diagram.jpeg"/>
 
<b>Figure 2:</b> <!--- Insert image name between tags. ---->
 
<b>Figure 2:</b> <!--- Insert image name between tags. ---->

Revision as of 20:33, 27 October 2017

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Our Experimental Results

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