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<p>To achieve our goal of encapsulating bacteria into Peptidosomes that can sense antibiotics of the beta-lactam family, we first needed to develop a reliable biosensor strain. | <p>To achieve our goal of encapsulating bacteria into Peptidosomes that can sense antibiotics of the beta-lactam family, we first needed to develop a reliable biosensor strain. | ||
In <i>Staphylococcus aureus</i> the <i>bla</i>-operon encodes a one-component system, which is responsible for sensing and mediating resistance against beta-lactam antibiotics. The idea was to transfer the regulatory elements of this operon to <i>Bacillus subtilis</i> and replace the native output – being the beta-lactamase <i>BlaZ</i> – by an easy detectable signal. Thus, making <i>Bacillus subtilis</i> a beta-lactam sensing biosensor. (see Figure 2). </p> | In <i>Staphylococcus aureus</i> the <i>bla</i>-operon encodes a one-component system, which is responsible for sensing and mediating resistance against beta-lactam antibiotics. The idea was to transfer the regulatory elements of this operon to <i>Bacillus subtilis</i> and replace the native output – being the beta-lactamase <i>BlaZ</i> – by an easy detectable signal. Thus, making <i>Bacillus subtilis</i> a beta-lactam sensing biosensor. (see Figure 2). </p> | ||
+ | |||
+ | <figure> | ||
+ | <figure class="makeresponsive floatright" style="width: 60%;"> | ||
+ | <img src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2017/4/46/T--TU_Dresden--P_Biosensor_Figure2_mechanismbiosensor.png" | ||
+ | alt="Figure 2 Molecular mechanism of the Biosensor" class="zoom"> | ||
+ | <figcaption><b>Figure 2: Overall concept showing the components and the molecular mechanism of the Biosensor in <i>B. subtilis</i>.</b>Upon binding of a beta-lactam to the receptor BlaR1 <b>(1)</b>, the signal is transferred to the repressor BlaI, which releases its target promoter <b>(2)</b> enabling the expression of an easy detectable reporter <b>(3)</b>.</figcaption> | ||
+ | </figure> | ||
+ | |||
<p>For the creation of our biosensor in B. subtilis, the bla-operon from S. aureus was split into three genetic constructs: <b>(A)</b> The Receptor gene blaR1 under control of a strong constitutive promotor (Pveg), <b>(B)</b> the Repressor gene blaI under control moderate strong constitutive promoter (P<sub><i>lepA</i></sub>) and <b>(C)</b> the target promoter region of the <i>bla</i>-operon (P<sub><i>blaZ</i></sub> and P<sub><i>blaR1I</i></sub>) in front of the <i>lux</i>-operon (<i>luxABCDE</i>). In addition, an inducible version of the <i>blaR1</i> construct was made by placing the P<sub><i>xylA</i></sub> promoter upstream of the <i>blaR1</i> gene <b>(A)</b>.</p> | <p>For the creation of our biosensor in B. subtilis, the bla-operon from S. aureus was split into three genetic constructs: <b>(A)</b> The Receptor gene blaR1 under control of a strong constitutive promotor (Pveg), <b>(B)</b> the Repressor gene blaI under control moderate strong constitutive promoter (P<sub><i>lepA</i></sub>) and <b>(C)</b> the target promoter region of the <i>bla</i>-operon (P<sub><i>blaZ</i></sub> and P<sub><i>blaR1I</i></sub>) in front of the <i>lux</i>-operon (<i>luxABCDE</i>). In addition, an inducible version of the <i>blaR1</i> construct was made by placing the P<sub><i>xylA</i></sub> promoter upstream of the <i>blaR1</i> gene <b>(A)</b>.</p> | ||
Revision as of 19:33, 28 October 2017