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<p>For the creation of our biosensor in B. subtilis, the bla-operon from S. aureus was split into three genetic constructs: <b>(A)</b> The Receptor gene blaR1 under control of a strong constitutive promotor (Pveg), <b>(B)</b> the Repressor gene blaI under control moderate strong constitutive promoter (P<sub><i>lepA</i></sub>) and <b>(C)</b> the target promoter region of the <i>bla</i>-operon (P<sub><i>blaZ</i></sub> and P<sub><i>blaR1I</i></sub>) in front of the <i>lux</i>-operon (<i>luxABCDE</i>). In addition, an inducible version of the <i>blaR1</i> construct was made by placing the P<sub><i>xylA</i></sub> promoter upstream of the <i>blaR1</i> gene <b>(A)</b>.</p> | <p>For the creation of our biosensor in B. subtilis, the bla-operon from S. aureus was split into three genetic constructs: <b>(A)</b> The Receptor gene blaR1 under control of a strong constitutive promotor (Pveg), <b>(B)</b> the Repressor gene blaI under control moderate strong constitutive promoter (P<sub><i>lepA</i></sub>) and <b>(C)</b> the target promoter region of the <i>bla</i>-operon (P<sub><i>blaZ</i></sub> and P<sub><i>blaR1I</i></sub>) in front of the <i>lux</i>-operon (<i>luxABCDE</i>). In addition, an inducible version of the <i>blaR1</i> construct was made by placing the P<sub><i>xylA</i></sub> promoter upstream of the <i>blaR1</i> gene <b>(A)</b>.</p> | ||
− | <p>All genetic constructs and plasmids have been created using the RFC10 <a target="_blank" href ="http://parts.igem.org/Help:Standards/Assembly/RFC10">RFC10</a> and/or <a target="_blank" href ="http://parts.igem.org/Assembly_standard_25">RFC25</a>cloning standard. Enzymes used were obtained from New England BioLabs©. Cloning procedures were carried out according to the manufacturer`s protocols. </p> | + | <p>All genetic constructs and plasmids have been created using the RFC10 <a target="_blank" href ="http://parts.igem.org/Help:Standards/Assembly/RFC10">RFC10</a> and/or <a target="_blank" href ="http://parts.igem.org/Assembly_standard_25">RFC25</a> cloning standard. Enzymes used were obtained from New England BioLabs©. Cloning procedures were carried out according to the manufacturer`s protocols. </p> |
<p>For submission of our parts to the registry, all Biobricks were cloned into the pSB1C3 backbone. The created genetic constructs were verified by sequencing (Eurofins or GATC sequencing services). All designed plasmids were stored in <i>Escherichia coli</i> DH10β (see <a target="_blank" href ="https://2017.igem.org/Team:TU_Dresden/Experiments">Experiments and Protocols</a> for details). In this project, we used integrative single-copy B. subtilis specific vectors that stably integrate into the genome at designated loci.[3]</p> | <p>For submission of our parts to the registry, all Biobricks were cloned into the pSB1C3 backbone. The created genetic constructs were verified by sequencing (Eurofins or GATC sequencing services). All designed plasmids were stored in <i>Escherichia coli</i> DH10β (see <a target="_blank" href ="https://2017.igem.org/Team:TU_Dresden/Experiments">Experiments and Protocols</a> for details). In this project, we used integrative single-copy B. subtilis specific vectors that stably integrate into the genome at designated loci.[3]</p> | ||
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Revision as of 16:07, 28 October 2017