Hakimbazol (Talk | contribs) |
Hakimbazol (Talk | contribs) |
||
Line 17: | Line 17: | ||
<p><justify>Mathematical modelling acts as engineering part in Synthetic Biology to be link between theoritical in reaction mechanisms and realisation in labwork. Our goal in modelling is to predict system behavior and give insight from our prediction how the system can (or must) be improved to wetlab team.</justify></p> | <p><justify>Mathematical modelling acts as engineering part in Synthetic Biology to be link between theoritical in reaction mechanisms and realisation in labwork. Our goal in modelling is to predict system behavior and give insight from our prediction how the system can (or must) be improved to wetlab team.</justify></p> | ||
− | <p><justify>There are four aspects that focused in our modelling, whiches are quorum sensing time, rate of PETase production and rate of PET hydrolysis by PETase with and without biofilm. These aspects modelled and then compared and fitted by the experiment data to ensure model can be used to predict and also to give numerical trends from the aspects that we stated above, before wetlab team do labwork in the lab.</justify></p> | + | <p><justify>There are four aspects that focused in our modelling, whiches are <b>quorum sensing time to predict biofilm formation</b>, <b>rate of PETase production</b> and <b>rate of PET hydrolysis by PETase with and without biofilm</b>. These aspects modelled and then compared and fitted by the experiment data to ensure model can be used to predict and also to give numerical trends from the aspects that we stated above, before wetlab team do labwork in the lab.</justify></p> |
<p><justify>All four models have data that <b>needed each other</b>. The rate of bacteria growth affects the amount of biofilm produced. According to our models, the rate of biofilm growth heavily depends on μ (specific growth rate) and the initial amount of inoculated bacterias. Bacterias produce mRNA, which influences the PETase production until it reaches steady state. This steady state value of PETase production will be set as the initial amount of PETase in calculating the rate of PET degradation.</justify></p> | <p><justify>All four models have data that <b>needed each other</b>. The rate of bacteria growth affects the amount of biofilm produced. According to our models, the rate of biofilm growth heavily depends on μ (specific growth rate) and the initial amount of inoculated bacterias. Bacterias produce mRNA, which influences the PETase production until it reaches steady state. This steady state value of PETase production will be set as the initial amount of PETase in calculating the rate of PET degradation.</justify></p> |
Revision as of 17:39, 30 October 2017
Modelling
Modelling Towards Precise Prediction
Quorum Sensing
Here ODEs that we used :
Growth curve
AI-2 Production
Biofilm Formation
PETase Transcription
1. No inclusion body is produced during the transcription. Consecutively, there’s also no TetR produced during the transcription.
2. Initally, there are 0.05 μM of mRNA and zero amount of PETase.
There, the differential equations of each parameter obtained through the analysis of mass balance are :Rate of PET Degradation with Biofilm
Based on illustration above, assumptions that we used are : 1. Biofilm is covered E. coli from effect of nutrient solution, but bottom section of E. coli is contacted with PET. 2. Corellation of q and qm, So equation 1 can be rewritten as : Based on assumptions that used in [], we get : Reaction mechanisms of PET degradation are stated below. We can derive differential equations that we need from reaction mechanisms. Here is coupled ODEs that we used to determine rate of PETase formation and degradation of PET with biofilm forming based on assumptions that stated above. Whereas PET defined as PET, E as PETase, and P is ethylene terephtalate, the product from PET degradation by PETase.
Rate of PET Degradation without Biofilm
Paragraph apapun