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

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         <p>Even if one managed to somehow substitute the RNA I promoter with another without disabling replication, it would still be inconvenient because this method would require a large pool of resources every time.</p>
 
         <p>Even if one managed to somehow substitute the RNA I promoter with another without disabling replication, it would still be inconvenient because this method would require a large pool of resources every time.</p>
 
         <p>For that reason we have decided not to modify or replace the RNA I promoter inside the initial (laukinio tipo?) wild type origin of replication, but rather to disable it completely and place a copy of it next to RNA II.</p>
 
         <p>For that reason we have decided not to modify or replace the RNA I promoter inside the initial (laukinio tipo?) wild type origin of replication, but rather to disable it completely and place a copy of it next to RNA II.</p>
  
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         <h2>Disabling the RNA I promoter</h2>
 
         <h2>Disabling the RNA I promoter</h2>
 
         <p>As already indicated, the main problem of inactivating the RNA I promoter is the necessity to take precautions in order keep the critically important secondary structures of RNA II intact.  </p>
 
         <p>As already indicated, the main problem of inactivating the RNA I promoter is the necessity to take precautions in order keep the critically important secondary structures of RNA II intact.  </p>
 
         <p>We have first acquired a priority mutation list from the literature. The list analysed RNA polymerase binding affinity to -10 and -35 promoter region and its dependence on point mutations, with mutations causing the largest decrease in affinity being displayed on the top of the list.</p><p> <div class="img-cont">
 
         <p>We have first acquired a priority mutation list from the literature. The list analysed RNA polymerase binding affinity to -10 and -35 promoter region and its dependence on point mutations, with mutations causing the largest decrease in affinity being displayed on the top of the list.</p><p> <div class="img-cont">
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ORI 3 did not seem to increase much in copy number. We did not consider it to be a good candidate as well, because we wanted our core synthetic ori to possess a range of copy numbers to choose from. </p><p>
 
ORI 3 did not seem to increase much in copy number. We did not consider it to be a good candidate as well, because we wanted our core synthetic ori to possess a range of copy numbers to choose from. </p><p>
 
The third candidate, ORI 4, seemed to be a decent candidate because with cloned RNA I its copy number fell to near wild type levels, but it also did not prove to be good enough, because its maximum number of copies was too low.</p>
 
The third candidate, ORI 4, seemed to be a decent candidate because with cloned RNA I its copy number fell to near wild type levels, but it also did not prove to be good enough, because its maximum number of copies was too low.</p>
<p>ORI 2 mutant seemed like a perfect candidate. Its copy number increased from wild type X levels to Y +- Z. In addition, when RNA I gene was placed next to it, the copy number of the constructed plasmid fell to wild type levels. After these results we have decided to use this ORI 2 mutant as a core for our framework. We simply called it RNA II (link to part http://parts.igem.org/wiki/index.php?title=Part:BBa_K2259000 ).
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<p>ORI 2 mutant seemed like a perfect candidate. Its copy number increased from wild type X levels to Y +- Z. In addition, when RNA I gene was placed next to it, the copy number of the constructed plasmid fell to wild type levels. After these results we have decided to use this ORI 2 mutant as a core for our framework. We simply called it RNA II (<a href="http://parts.igem.org/wiki/index.php?title=Part:BBa_K2259000"</a> ).
 
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<p>GRAFIKAS. Figure 2. RNA I and RNA II constructs, with RNA I constructs under different-strength Anderson (See anderson collection here http://parts.igem.org/Promoters/Catalog/Anderson ) promoters.</p>
 
<p>GRAFIKAS. Figure 2. RNA I and RNA II constructs, with RNA I constructs under different-strength Anderson (See anderson collection here http://parts.igem.org/Promoters/Catalog/Anderson ) promoters.</p>
 
<p>In theory (see “Modelling” for more details), lower-strength Anderson promoters should yield lower concentrations of RNA I, hence higher copy numbers of plasmids per cell.  Our constitutive copy number device experiment results prove it to be true in practice as well. The stronger Anderson promoter is used, the less copy number per cell we get. With the strongest Anderson we get only 21+-6.84 plasmids per cell. </p><p>
 
<p>In theory (see “Modelling” for more details), lower-strength Anderson promoters should yield lower concentrations of RNA I, hence higher copy numbers of plasmids per cell.  Our constitutive copy number device experiment results prove it to be true in practice as well. The stronger Anderson promoter is used, the less copy number per cell we get. With the strongest Anderson we get only 21+-6.84 plasmids per cell. </p><p>
Worth to mention is that the closest to wild type ColE1 replicon is the 0.86 strength Anderson promoter, measured by copy number alone. (http://parts.igem.org/Part:BBa_J23102)</p><p>
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Worth to mention is that the closest to wild type ColE1 replicon is the 0.86 strength Anderson promoter, measured by copy number alone. (<a href="http://parts.igem.org/Part:BBa_J23102</a>)</p><p>
 
We can state with certainty that we are now able to control the plasmid copy number in a constitutive manner, and we call it simply the SynORI constitutive copy number device.
 
We can state with certainty that we are now able to control the plasmid copy number in a constitutive manner, and we call it simply the SynORI constitutive copy number device.
Next, we wanted to move one step forward and try to build an inducible copy number system. We first had to make sure that at least part of our construct is well characterized and to so we chose the rhamnose promoter from the biobrick registry (http://parts.igem.org/Part:BBa_K914003).</p><p>
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Next, we wanted to move one step forward and try to build an inducible copy number system. We first had to make sure that at least part of our construct is well characterized and to so we chose the rhamnose promoter from the biobrick registry (<a href="http://parts.igem.org/Part:BBa_K914003"</a>).</p><p>
For this experiment we have built a rhamnose and RNA I construct (http://parts.igem.org/wiki/index.php?title=Part%3ABBa_K2259065) and then cloned this construct next to RNA II (http://parts.igem.org/wiki/index.php?title=Part%3ABBa_K2259091). We have used different percent of rhamnose in our media in order to see if this approach was possible and if so, to figure out the dependency between the plasmid copy number and rhamnose concentration.</p>
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For this experiment we have built a rhamnose and RNA I construct (<a href="http://parts.igem.org/wiki/index.php?title=Part%3ABBa_K2259065"</a>) and then cloned this construct next to RNA II (http://parts.igem.org/wiki/index.php?title=Part%3ABBa_K2259091). We have used different percent of rhamnose in our media in order to see if this approach was possible and if so, to figure out the dependency between the plasmid copy number and rhamnose concentration.</p>
 
<p>Grafikas. Figure 3. RNA I and RNA II constructs, with RNA I gene being under the rhamnose promoter. </p>
 
<p>Grafikas. Figure 3. RNA I and RNA II constructs, with RNA I gene being under the rhamnose promoter. </p>
 
<p>The first thing we noticed was that rhamnose promoter was very strong in terms of plasmid copy number reduction. It was also considerably leaky (promoter can be enabled even without any inducer). At zero induction there were approximately only 9 plasmids per cell and at 1 percent induction the number rose to approximately 1 plasmid per cell. </p><p>
 
<p>The first thing we noticed was that rhamnose promoter was very strong in terms of plasmid copy number reduction. It was also considerably leaky (promoter can be enabled even without any inducer). At zero induction there were approximately only 9 plasmids per cell and at 1 percent induction the number rose to approximately 1 plasmid per cell. </p><p>
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Brewster R. C, Jones D. L, Phillips R. Tuning Promoter Strength through RNA Polymerase Binding Site Design in Escherichia coli. PLoS Comput Biol. 2012 Dec; 8(12): e1002811.</p>
 
Brewster R. C, Jones D. L, Phillips R. Tuning Promoter Strength through RNA Polymerase Binding Site Design in Escherichia coli. PLoS Comput Biol. 2012 Dec; 8(12): e1002811.</p>
  
 
 
<h5>RNA I, and consequently, the copy number of a plasmid can now be placed under virtually any signal pattern required. </h5>
 
 
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        <p>We have first showed this by placing RNA I under a series of constitutive Anderson promoters and an inducible Rhamnose promoter.</p>
 
 
<h4>We can now flexibly control the copy number of a plasmid! What comes next? </h4>
 
 
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Revision as of 00:17, 2 November 2017

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Determining the plasmid copy number

Design

Preparing for the framework: standard curve generation and plasmid copy number evaluation

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