Team:Amsterdam/practices/results

From 2012.igem.org

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* Low concentrations of IPTG may (1-100 µM) not enter the cell, because of the phenomenon called ‘inducer exclusion’. In this case, glucose transport leads to phosphorylation of a compound of the phosphotransferase system (PTS), which in turn blocks the lacY transporter of IPTG. During our experiments we prevented this from happening by using higher concentrations of IPTG.
* Low concentrations of IPTG may (1-100 µM) not enter the cell, because of the phenomenon called ‘inducer exclusion’. In this case, glucose transport leads to phosphorylation of a compound of the phosphotransferase system (PTS), which in turn blocks the lacY transporter of IPTG. During our experiments we prevented this from happening by using higher concentrations of IPTG.
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* The basal activity of the envisioned LacH promotor might result in background noise because of leaky expression of the methyltransferase.
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* The basal activity of the envisioned LacH promotor might result in background noise because of leaky expression of the methyltransferase. We tried to solve this problem by doing experiments with the [https://2012.igem.org/Team:Amsterdam/data/experimental#Reducing_basal_activity_of_the_LacH_promoter_using_LacIQ_E._Coli_strain: ''LacIQ strain of E.coli and by using the pBAD promotor.'']
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We tried to solve this problem by doing experiments with the [https://2012.igem.org/Team:Amsterdam/data/experimental#Reducing_basal_activity_of_the_LacH_promoter_using_LacIQ_E._Coli_strain: ''LacIQ strain of E.coli and by using the pBAD promotor.'']
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<h4>Innovation manager & Business developer</h4>
<h4>Innovation manager & Business developer</h4>

Revision as of 01:57, 27 September 2012