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As all PREDCEL/PACE experiments are based on phage infection, selection for efficient T7-RNAP auto-reassembly starts with a phage injecting its genome, the selection plasmid (SP), into a bacterial cell. The SP carries the two halves of the split T7 RNAP expressed under one geneIII (gIII) promotor. Further it contains required genes for phage reproduction except for gIII. | As all PREDCEL/PACE experiments are based on phage infection, selection for efficient T7-RNAP auto-reassembly starts with a phage injecting its genome, the selection plasmid (SP), into a bacterial cell. The SP carries the two halves of the split T7 RNAP expressed under one geneIII (gIII) promotor. Further it contains required genes for phage reproduction except for gIII. | ||
If through MP-activation mutation process leads to beneficial mutations in one or both T7 RNAP sequences, split variants assemble efficiently, bind to T7 promotor and thereby activate expression of protein III (pIII). Now phages can be built including pIII. That enables the phage to be released and to infect new cells (left). | If through MP-activation mutation process leads to beneficial mutations in one or both T7 RNAP sequences, split variants assemble efficiently, bind to T7 promotor and thereby activate expression of protein III (pIII). Now phages can be built including pIII. That enables the phage to be released and to infect new cells (left). | ||
− | If mutations are inefficient, T7 RNAP halves do not reassemble, therefore cannot bind to T7 promotor and | + | If mutations are inefficient, T7 RNAP halves do not reassemble, therefore cannot bind to T7 promotor and pIII is not expressed. Therefore, phages cannot leave cells or infect new cells (right).| |
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Revision as of 15:03, 1 November 2017
Protein Interaction
Improving Split Protein Auto-Reassembly