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<button onclick="myFunction('Demo2')" class="myButton">Preparing electrocompetent PQN4 cells</button> | <button onclick="myFunction('Demo2')" class="myButton">Preparing electrocompetent PQN4 cells</button> | ||
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− | + | <h1 style="color:black;"><b> Relating Transcription Rate to Protein Production </b></h1><br><hr><br> | |
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− | + | <u><em>Assumption:</u></em><br> | |
− | + | CsgA alone and CsgA-fusions (such as CsgA-AFP8 and CsgA-SpyTag) behave similarly in terms of transcription in the cells. | |
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− | + | The transcription rate of the CsgA gene is modeled as follows: | |
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− | + | <img src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2017/e/e1/T--Queens_Canada--TranscriptionRateofCsgAgene.png" style="width:35%"> | |
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− | + | where, <br> | |
− | + | <img src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2017/a/af/T--Queens_Canada--ProductionRateofCsgAgenecropped.png" style="width:25%"><br> | |
− | + | <img src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2017/0/0d/T--Queens_Canada--DegradationRateofCsgAgene.png" style="width:25%"><br> | |
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− | + | Thus, by the stated assumption, the transcription rate of CsgA-fusions can be modeled with the same equation. | |
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Revision as of 23:35, 16 October 2017
Protocols from key experiments for our project:
Relating Relative Promoter Units to Transcription Rate
Assumption:
The first major assumption, is declaring "Promoter Activity" , to be a direct model of transcription rate. "Promoter Activity" is the number of RNAP molecules that clear the final base pair of a promoter (with units of [PoPS]
= Polymerase per second).
Thus,
Where,
Thus, through simple substitution:
The modelling can further be simplified through a series of assumptions:
1) GFP expressed from test and standard promoters, have equivalent maturation rates, as they mature under the same conditions:
2) Since both the test and standard promoters are carried on the same plasmid backbone, assume they have the same average copy number:
3) Since promoters have been standardized to have identical transcription initiation sites (predicted) and identical sequences downstream of the site, we expect them to produce the same mRNA sequences.
Therefore,
Expect transcribed mRNA to be identical, implying mRNA degradation rates are equivalent:
Thus, we assume translational rates of immature GFP from some mRNA are equal:
4) Assume that immature GFP is stable. Therefore, protein degradation is negligable compared to dilution due to cell growth.
Thus:
Thus,
and if
Then,
Therefore, we assume the difference between growth rates of cells containing the test promoter construct and cells containing the standard promoter construct, is negligible compared to the maturation rate of GFP.
Thus, for the purposes of QGEM's modelling;
Relating Transcription Rate to Protein Production
Assumption:
CsgA alone and CsgA-fusions (such as CsgA-AFP8 and CsgA-SpyTag) behave similarly in terms of transcription in the cells.
The transcription rate of the CsgA gene is modeled as follows:
where,
Thus, by the stated assumption, the transcription rate of CsgA-fusions can be modeled with the same equation.
Materials
- Congo Red powder
- Brilliant Blue G250 dye
- Yeast extract powder
- Casamino acids
- Agar
- IPTG
- Antibiotic of choice
- CR stock: dissolve 1 g of Congo Red in 100 mL of water and filter sterilize. Store at 4°C.
- Brilliant Blue stock: dissolve 1 g Brilliant Blue G250 dye in 100 mL water and filter sterilize. Store at 4°C. [brilliant blue increases the colour contrast of the colonies on the agar]
- YESCA CR agar plates: 10 g/L casamino acids, 1 g/L yeast extract, and 20 g/L agar, 100 ug/mL antibiotic (for Amp; will vary depending on your antibiotic), 0.5 mM IPTG, 50 µg/mL Congo Red and 1 µg/mL Brilliant Blue. Autoclave only the dissolved agar and yeast extract, and filter sterilize the other components. Add the filtered components after autoclaved mixture has cooled.
- Pick single colonies and streak out on a YESCA CR agar plate
- To induce curli production, grow bacteria on YESCA CR agar at 26°C for 48 h
- Check the color of the bacterial colonies. Wild-type curli-producing E. coli cells stain red on YESCA CR agar, whereas curli defective mutants are usually pink or white. E. coli mutants with hyper curli production sometimes stain dark red
Materials
- Congo Red powder
- Brilliant Blue G250 dye
- Yeast extract powder
- Casamino acids
- Agar
- IPTG
- Antibiotic of choice
- CR stock: dissolve 1 g of Congo Red in 100 mL of water and filter sterilize. Store at 4°C.
- Brilliant Blue stock: dissolve 1 g Brilliant Blue G250 dye in 100 mL water and filter sterilize. Store at 4°C. [brilliant blue increases the colour contrast of the colonies on the agar]
- YESCA CR agar plates: 10 g/L casamino acids, 1 g/L yeast extract, and 20 g/L agar, 100 ug/mL antibiotic (for Amp; will vary depending on your antibiotic), 0.5 mM IPTG, 50 µg/mL Congo Red and 1 µg/mL Brilliant Blue. Autoclave only the dissolved agar and yeast extract, and filter sterilize the other components. Add the filtered components after autoclaved mixture has cooled.
- Pick single colonies and streak out on a YESCA CR agar plate
- To induce curli production, grow bacteria on YESCA CR agar at 26°C for 48 h
- Check the color of the bacterial colonies. Wild-type curli-producing E. coli cells stain red on YESCA CR agar, whereas curli defective mutants are usually pink or white. E. coli mutants with hyper curli production sometimes stain dark red
Materials
- Congo Red powder
- Brilliant Blue G250 dye
- Yeast extract powder
- Casamino acids
- Agar
- IPTG
- Antibiotic of choice
- CR stock: dissolve 1 g of Congo Red in 100 mL of water and filter sterilize. Store at 4°C.
- Brilliant Blue stock: dissolve 1 g Brilliant Blue G250 dye in 100 mL water and filter sterilize. Store at 4°C. [brilliant blue increases the colour contrast of the colonies on the agar]
- YESCA CR agar plates: 10 g/L casamino acids, 1 g/L yeast extract, and 20 g/L agar, 100 ug/mL antibiotic (for Amp; will vary depending on your antibiotic), 0.5 mM IPTG, 50 µg/mL Congo Red and 1 µg/mL Brilliant Blue. Autoclave only the dissolved agar and yeast extract, and filter sterilize the other components. Add the filtered components after autoclaved mixture has cooled.
- Pick single colonies and streak out on a YESCA CR agar plate
- To induce curli production, grow bacteria on YESCA CR agar at 26°C for 48 h
- Check the color of the bacterial colonies. Wild-type curli-producing E. coli cells stain red on YESCA CR agar, whereas curli defective mutants are usually pink or white. E. coli mutants with hyper curli production sometimes stain dark red