Difference between revisions of "Team:BostonU/Results"

 
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   <p class="inline-heading-type mainwrap">Characterizing Our Cell Free System</p>
 
   <p class="inline-heading-type mainwrap">Characterizing Our Cell Free System</p>
   <p class="body-type mainwrap">The first step in our project was to characterize the activity of the cell-free transcription-translation system we made in house. This characterization required measuring the maximum protein expression levels that can be accomplished in the cell free system. We first designed a model to estimate the concentration of DNA at which fluorescence would saturate in the system. We found that the expression capacity of the system is best modeled as a bell-shaped dose response curve, which we describe in greater detail on our modeling page. We experimentally characterized the cell-free system by measuring the expression of varying concentrations of a plasmid coding for a constitutively active deGFP gene. We found that maximal expression in the cell-free system is achieved around 20 nM concentrations of DNA.</p>
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   <p class="body-type mainwrap">The first step in our project was to characterize the activity of the cell-free transcription-translation system we made in house. This characterization required measuring the maximum protein expression levels that can be accomplished in the cell free system. We first designed a mathematical model to estimate the concentration of DNA at which fluorescence would saturate in the system. We found that the expression capacity of the system is best modeled as a bell-shaped dose response curve, which we describe in greater detail on our modeling page. We experimentally characterized the cell-free system by measuring the expression of varying concentrations of a plasmid coding for a constitutively active deGFP gene. We found that maximal expression in the cell-free system is achieved around 20 nM concentrations of DNA.</p>
 
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   <p class="body-type"><strong>Figure 1.</strong>This figure shows fluorescence from constitutive deGFP plasmids at 10 nM, 20 nM, 30 nM, and 40 nM concentrations as well as a reaction containing no DNA. </p>
 
   <p class="body-type"><strong>Figure 1.</strong>This figure shows fluorescence from constitutive deGFP plasmids at 10 nM, 20 nM, 30 nM, and 40 nM concentrations as well as a reaction containing no DNA. </p>
 
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   <p class="inline-heading-type mainwrap">Characterizing Toehold Switch Activity in Cell Free</p>
 
   <p class="inline-heading-type mainwrap">Characterizing Toehold Switch Activity in Cell Free</p>
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   <p class="body-type"><strong>Figure 2.</strong> This figure shows fluorescence from a cell free reaction in which 10 nM toehold plasmids express deGFP in response to RNA triggers at 10,000X concentrations. This is compared to reactions containing no DNA, only toehold plasmid DNA, and a plasmid with constitutively active deGFP. </p>
 
   <p class="body-type"><strong>Figure 2.</strong> This figure shows fluorescence from a cell free reaction in which 10 nM toehold plasmids express deGFP in response to RNA triggers at 10,000X concentrations. This is compared to reactions containing no DNA, only toehold plasmid DNA, and a plasmid with constitutively active deGFP. </p>
 
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  <p class="body-type mainwrap">Through these results we determined that toehold switches produce detectable levels of protein expression when activated by trigger RNA at 10,000X concentrations. Future experiments would aim to improve expression.
 
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   <p class="body-type"><strong>Figure 4.</strong> This figure shows fluorescence from a cell free reaction in which a constitutive BxbI recombinase plasmid was added to 10 nM reporter plasmids in order to drive deGFP expression. This is compared to reactions containing no DNA, only reporter plasmid DNA, a plasmid with constitutively active deGFP, and a reaction with the constitutive BxbI recombinase plasmid added to the constitutive deGFP plasmid. </p>
 
   <p class="body-type"><strong>Figure 4.</strong> This figure shows fluorescence from a cell free reaction in which a constitutive BxbI recombinase plasmid was added to 10 nM reporter plasmids in order to drive deGFP expression. This is compared to reactions containing no DNA, only reporter plasmid DNA, a plasmid with constitutively active deGFP, and a reaction with the constitutive BxbI recombinase plasmid added to the constitutive deGFP plasmid. </p>
 
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  <p class="body-type mainwrap">These experiments reveal that at this point, the recombinases we used (Cre and BxbI) do not exhibit detectable rates of recombination in our cell free system. Future experiments will focus on determining failure points in the experiments presented here, and subsequently characterizing functional recombinases in our cell free.
 
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Latest revision as of 17:21, 1 November 2017

RESULTS