Difference between revisions of "Team:TUDelft/Main-Measurement"

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<div class="collapsible-header">Further improvements</div>
 
<div class="collapsible-header">Further improvements</div>
     <div class="collapsible-body"><p>Several optimization and broadening steps for the coacervation method can be thought of. Trivial optimization steps are those in which the coacervate forming polymers and their concentrations are optimized to achieve maximum visual difference between coacervates and homogenous solutions. Furthermore, there exist dyes that partition into coacervates rather than in the polymer-poor phase, and by centrifugation the dyed coacervates can be spun down to the bottom of a tube (<a href="#references">Aumiller et al. 2016</a>; <a href="#references">Aumiller & Keating 2015</a>). For more quantitative measurements with the coacervation method, absorbances can be measured in a UV/Vis spectrophotometer, as we did for several of our own <a href"https://2017.igem.org/Team:TUDelft/Results#coacervation">experiments</a> as well.</p>
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     <div class="collapsible-body"><p>Several optimization and broadening steps for the coacervation method can be thought of. Trivial optimization steps are those in which the coacervate forming polymers and their concentrations are optimized to achieve maximum visual difference between coacervates and homogenous solutions. Furthermore, there exist dyes that partition into coacervates rather than in the polymer-poor phase, and by centrifugation the dyed coacervates can be spun down to the bottom of a tube (<a href="#references">Aumiller et al. 2016</a>; <a href="#references">Aumiller & Keating 2015</a>). For more quantitative measurements with the coacervation method, absorbances can be measured in a UV/Vis spectrophotometer, as we did for several of our own <a href="https://2017.igem.org/Team:TUDelft/Results#coacervation">experiments</a> as well.</p>
 
      
 
      
 
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Revision as of 10:34, 31 October 2017

Measurement

Measurement

One of the main aims within our project was to develop a detection method to detect the presence of specific RNA sequences without the use of any complicated laboratory equipment. Furthermore, this method should be cheap and widely available to everyone. We indeed succeeded in developing such method and this page is dedicated to describe how this novel measurement method was implemented in our project. It is based on structures called 'coacervates'.
Coacervates are polymer-rich regions in solutions of mutually attractive polymers. The process of mutually attractive polymers phase-separating into a polymer-rich and polymer-poor phase is known as coacervation. This process can under some circumstances be observed by the naked eye, as coacervates generally cause solutions to be more turbid. A key physical property of coacervates is that they require polymers of a certain length to form. In general, only polymers that are ‘long enough’ form coacervates. The underlying reason for this can be explained theoretically and experimentally. These latter facts directly imply that (changes in) polymer length can be visualized to the naked eye, which we utilized to design a novel detection method coined CINDY Seq. However as we will argue in greater detail below, the method has potential to serve as a far broader method to characterize existing and future BioBricks, and the activity of many enzymes that show synthesis or degradation of any (coacervating) polymer.