Team:TU-Delft/receptordesign

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Receptor

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Chimeric receptor design: What, Why and How
In silico protocol
Example

Chimeric receptor design: What, Why and How

What?


Protocol for making protein chimeras with a rat G protein coupled receptor (RI7) and Your Favorite Receptor. The order of the DNA sequence looks like this: RI7-[Your Favorite Receptor]-RI7

Why?


One of the requirements for a working GPCR is that the receptor should be localized into the outside membrane of yeast cell. By replacing the N-terminal part of Your Favorite Receptor by the N-terminal ends of a receptor that is known to be localized into the outside membrane of Saccharomyces cerevisiae (R17), Your Favorite Receptor (YFR) will also be localized into the membrane. The C-terminal part of a GPCR is the alpha subunit binding region. If this is replaced by the RI7 regions a higher affinity with the alpha subunit can be reached [1].
How?
With this step-by-step protocol we guide you trough all the in silico designing steps. After this the DNA can be transformed in yeast and you have your own olfactory yeast!