Team:Amsterdam/ernst

From 2012.igem.org

(Difference between revisions)
(Created page with "{{Team:Amsterdam/ernst/stylesheet}} {{Team:Amsterdam/ernst/scripts}} {{Team:Amsterdam/ernst/Header}} {{Team:Amsterdam/ernst/Sidebar1}} <div id="main-content"> <p><b>Introduction<...")
(Replaced content with "{{Team:Amsterdam/ernst/}}")
Line 1: Line 1:
-
{{Team:Amsterdam/ernst/stylesheet}}
+
{{Team:Amsterdam/ernst/}}
-
{{Team:Amsterdam/ernst/scripts}}
+
-
{{Team:Amsterdam/ernst/Header}}
+
-
{{Team:Amsterdam/ernst/Sidebar1}}
+
-
<div id="main-content">
+
-
<p><b>Introduction</b><br>
+
-
Prokaryotes have been selected through evolutionary processes for accurate sensing
+
-
and acting upon their living environments. This bacterial versatility can be used by
+
-
us, humans, to sense the environments in places we have trouble reaching. Maybe we
+
-
would want to measure the conditions (e.g. nutrient availability, toxicity, pathogen
+
-
presence, light) somewhere deep under the ground, perhaps we would want to noninvasively
+
-
scan for biomarkers in diseased tissue in our bodies. The classical way
+
-
to make a bacteria tell us whether a certain event has happened is to link it to the
+
-
transcription of fluorescent proteins. This however requires constant monitoring and
+
-
maintenance in order to get an idea of the time-variation of the studied system. Could
+
-
we make the cell ‘remember’ what it has sensed and when so we can leave it alone for a
+
-
while and make it report back to us later?<br><br>
+
-
 
+
-
Meet E. memo, a ‘cellular logbook’, which uses the naturally occurring phenomenon
+
-
of <b>DNA methylation</b> to robustly store signals it has sensed in its environment. The
+
-
Amsterdam iGEM 2012 team, consisting of six students, will dedicate the summer to
+
-
the realization of this innovative and ambitious plan. This novel storage mechanism,
+
-
redesignating an evolutionarly designed tested and proven principle for novel purposes,
+
-
could be linked to any of the many biological sensors that are available in the DNA
+
-
parts registry. E. memo therefore holds great promise as a detect & store–system for
+
-
experimental and industrial purposes.<br><br>
+
-
 
+
-
Just storing whether certain signals have been sensed by the cell is only half of the story
+
-
however. The proposed memory mechanism would be a form of volatile memory,
+
-
of which the traces slowly dissappear as the E. memo-population keeps proliferating.
+
-
This is because methylation-patterns are not transferred to the progeny in eukaryotes.
+
-
We can use this our advantage. The most exciting part of our project would be to infer
+
-
when a signal has been sensed from the percentage of bits that is methylated, which
+
-
slowly decreases as the cells keep proliferating. This way, we won’t just store whether
+
-
a certain signal has occured; we will also know when it happened.<br><br>
+
-
 
+
-
<b>Molecular mechanism</b><br>
+
-
In short, we will introduce a site-specific methyltransferase into the iGEM default
+
-
chassis organism E. coli, that will only be active/transcribed when the measured signal
+
-
is encountered by the logbook-cell. The activated methyltransferase will then move
+
-
over to a plasmid region we’ve termed the bit and append a methyl-group to it. By
+
-
1
+
-
linking the methyltransferase to a Zinc-Finger, its site-specificity is greatly increased,
+
-
reducing the amount of undesired background methylation events to a minimum.
+
-
Furthermore, by slowing down the cell replication cycle of the cells, we can increase
+
-
the span of time we can use to do measurements on.</p>
+
-
</div>
+
-
{{Team:Amsterdam/ernst/Foot}}
+

Revision as of 16:40, 7 July 2012

Template:Team:Amsterdam/ernst/