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<h3>ssDNA Readout</h3> | <h3>ssDNA Readout</h3> | ||
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For this readout, we wanted to link the cleavage of an RNA strand (due to Cas13a activation) to an amplification scheme based on ssDNA. A dimer is formed between a ssDNA sequence and an inhibitor ssRNA sequence. This RNA is composed of three regions binding to the ssDNA separated by polyU loops (<b>Figure 2</b>)<b>insert fig from project design</b>, so that upon cleavage of the polyU loops by Cas13a, the melting temperature of the dimer is lowered and the cleaved ssRNA falls off. The ssDNA is freed and can be used into an amplification scheme: we envisioned that it would either complete a linear transcription template (known as genelet) that is single-stranded in its promoter region, and activate its transcription <b>(reference:Timing molecular motion and production with a synthetic transcriptional clock | For this readout, we wanted to link the cleavage of an RNA strand (due to Cas13a activation) to an amplification scheme based on ssDNA. A dimer is formed between a ssDNA sequence and an inhibitor ssRNA sequence. This RNA is composed of three regions binding to the ssDNA separated by polyU loops (<b>Figure 2</b>)<b>insert fig from project design</b>, so that upon cleavage of the polyU loops by Cas13a, the melting temperature of the dimer is lowered and the cleaved ssRNA falls off. The ssDNA is freed and can be used into an amplification scheme: we envisioned that it would either complete a linear transcription template (known as genelet) that is single-stranded in its promoter region, and activate its transcription <b>(reference:Timing molecular motion and production with a synthetic transcriptional clock | ||
Elisa Francoa, Eike Friedrichsb, Jongmin Kimc, Ralf Jungmannb, Richard Murraya, Erik Winfreec,d,e, and Friedrich C. Simmelb,1 )</b> | Elisa Francoa, Eike Friedrichsb, Jongmin Kimc, Ralf Jungmannb, Richard Murraya, Erik Winfreec,d,e, and Friedrich C. Simmelb,1 )</b> | ||
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. Similarly, DNA amplification could be signaled with nucleic acid binding dyes and fluorescence could be read with our <a class="myLink" href="https://2017.igem.org/Team:Munich/Hardware/Detector">detector</a>. | . Similarly, DNA amplification could be signaled with nucleic acid binding dyes and fluorescence could be read with our <a class="myLink" href="https://2017.igem.org/Team:Munich/Hardware/Detector">detector</a>. | ||
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We designed a fitting inhibitor RNA and complementary DNA activator, and confirmed with Nupack<b>link to Nupack.com</b> that cleaving of the polyU loops would cause the dimer to melt at room temperature. The functional assembly of the RNA/DNA dimer could be proved by native PAGE.<b>insert NATIVE PAGE</b> We designed a double-stranded DNA template that is only single-stranded in its promoter region, so that it could be activated by the released ssDNA activator. Furthermore, the cornerstone for the transfer of the circuit to a colorimetric readout was laid by the successful cloning of aeBlue into a pSB1C3 backbone. This construct can be amplified, then cleaved with a type II restriction enzyme and a nuclease, so that the promoter region can be rendered single stranded. However, to this point we were not able to demonstrate that Cas13a activity, or even RNaseH, can successfully free the ssDNA activator. We think that the ssDNA/ssRNA ratio and the sequences could be optimized so that the dimer can be melted after RNA cleavage. We initially tried to prove that the dimer could be formed, and we may have overshot the design in the direction of dimer stability and binding efficiency. We also did not find a dye that gave us a very good read of the nucleic acids concentrations in such a dynamic system. We do not see a fundamental blockage to the possibility to develop this readout to the colorimetric readout, but we did not reach the full proof-of-concept within the time of our project. | We designed a fitting inhibitor RNA and complementary DNA activator, and confirmed with Nupack<b>link to Nupack.com</b> that cleaving of the polyU loops would cause the dimer to melt at room temperature. The functional assembly of the RNA/DNA dimer could be proved by native PAGE.<b>insert NATIVE PAGE</b> We designed a double-stranded DNA template that is only single-stranded in its promoter region, so that it could be activated by the released ssDNA activator. Furthermore, the cornerstone for the transfer of the circuit to a colorimetric readout was laid by the successful cloning of aeBlue into a pSB1C3 backbone. This construct can be amplified, then cleaved with a type II restriction enzyme and a nuclease, so that the promoter region can be rendered single stranded. However, to this point we were not able to demonstrate that Cas13a activity, or even RNaseH, can successfully free the ssDNA activator. We think that the ssDNA/ssRNA ratio and the sequences could be optimized so that the dimer can be melted after RNA cleavage. We initially tried to prove that the dimer could be formed, and we may have overshot the design in the direction of dimer stability and binding efficiency. We also did not find a dye that gave us a very good read of the nucleic acids concentrations in such a dynamic system. We do not see a fundamental blockage to the possibility to develop this readout to the colorimetric readout, but we did not reach the full proof-of-concept within the time of our project. | ||
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