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

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<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>
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<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>
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>Part:BBa_J23102</a>)</p><p>
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<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. (<a href="http://parts.igem.org/Part:BBa_J23102>Part:BBa_J23102</a>)</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.
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<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.</p>
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">Part:BBa_K914003</a>).</p><p>
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<p>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">Part:BBa_K914003</a>).</p>
For this experiment we have built a rhamnose and RNA I construct (<a href="http://parts.igem.org/Part:BBa_K2259065">Part:BBa_K2259065</a>) and then cloned this construct next to RNA II (<a href="http://parts.igem.org/Part:BBa_K2259091">Part:BBa_K2259091</a>). 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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<p>For this experiment we have built a rhamnose and RNA I construct (<a href="http://parts.igem.org/Part:BBa_K2259065">Part:BBa_K2259065</a>) and then cloned this construct next to RNA II (<a href="http://parts.igem.org/Part:BBa_K2259091">Part:BBa_K2259091</a>). 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>
  
 
   
 
   

Revision as of 02:21, 16 November 2017

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Determining the plasmid copy number

Design and Results

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

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