Difference between revisions of "Team:Newcastle/Results"

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           <p>We also decided to test our part with glyphosate to determine the efficiency of the native C-P Lyase pathway that degrades glyphosate to sarcoine. Everything was repeated as above, but we added 0 µl, 20 µl, 200 µl and 2 ml of Glyphosate at 10 mg/L concentration to the cell lysate and incubated at 37°C. Every 2.5 hours the lysate was tested with the same formaldehyde strips as before.</p>
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           <p>We also decided to test our part with glyphosate to determine the efficiency of the native C-P Lyase pathway that degrades glyphosate to sarcoine. Everything was repeated as above, but we added 0 µl, 20 µl, 200 µl and 2 ml of glyphosate at 10 mg/L concentration to the cell lysate and incubated at 37°C. Every 2.5 hours the lysate was tested with the same formaldehyde strips as before.</p>
 
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           <p>After 8 hours of testing and left overnight, none of the samples had produced formaldehyde according to the testing strips. The testing strips detect a minimum formaldehyde concentration of 10 mg/L, so it was possible that formaldehyde had been produced but that there was too little of it to detect with the strips.</p>
 
           <p>After 8 hours of testing and left overnight, none of the samples had produced formaldehyde according to the testing strips. The testing strips detect a minimum formaldehyde concentration of 10 mg/L, so it was possible that formaldehyde had been produced but that there was too little of it to detect with the strips.</p>
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           <h2 style="font-family: Rubik; text-align: left; margin-top: 1%"> Conclusions and Future Work </h2>
 
           <h2 style="font-family: Rubik; text-align: left; margin-top: 1%"> Conclusions and Future Work </h2>
 
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           <p><i>E. coli</i> cells naturally have the C-P lyase pathway which degrades glyphosate into sarcosine. The fact that no formaldehyde was produced when glyphosate was added, but was when sarcosine was added, indicates that we have not overexpressed the C-P lyase pathway enough to produce enough sarcosine for SOX to convert into formaldehyde to be detected.
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           <p><i>E. coli</i> cells naturally have the C-P lyase pathway which degrades glyphosate into sarcosine. The fact that formaldehyde was produced when sarcosine was added, but not when glyphosate was added, indicates that we have not overexpressed the C-P lyase pathway enough to produce enough sarcosine for SOX to convert into formaldehyde to be detected.
 
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         <p>Due to time constraints, we were unable to produce an <i>in vivo</i> formaldehyde detector variant of the Sensynova framework. Future characterisation of this part would include using the platform customised as a formaldehyde biosensor in order to sense compound produce and therefore creating a biosensor of glyphosate.
 
         <p>Due to time constraints, we were unable to produce an <i>in vivo</i> formaldehyde detector variant of the Sensynova framework. Future characterisation of this part would include using the platform customised as a formaldehyde biosensor in order to sense compound produce and therefore creating a biosensor of glyphosate.

Revision as of 19:53, 1 November 2017

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Our Experimental Results


Below is a diagram of our Sensynova Framework. Clicking on each part of the framework (e.g. detector modules) links to the relevant results.

Alternatively, at the bottom of this page are tabs which will show you results for every part of the project



Framework

Framework Chassis

Biochemical Adaptor

Target

Detector Modules

Multicellular Framework Testing


C12 HSL: Connector 1

Processor Modules

Framework in Cell Free Protein Synthesis Systems


C4 HSL: Connector 2

Reporter Modules



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