Team:UIUC-Illinois/Project/Future/Petrobrick

From 2012.igem.org

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<p>Fig. 1. Standard curve created from the results of GCMS analysis of the four controlled known concentrations of C15 alkanes and the corresponding peak areas.</p>
<p>Fig. 1. Standard curve created from the results of GCMS analysis of the four controlled known concentrations of C15 alkanes and the corresponding peak areas.</p>
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<center><img src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2012/8/85/Petro2.png" width=577 height=474></center>
<center><img src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2012/8/85/Petro2.png" width=577 height=474></center>
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Revision as of 18:41, 30 September 2012

Header

Petrobrick

Petrobrick
Characterization

  • Overview
  • Experimental Design
  • Results
  • Conclusion
  • Petrobrick Overview


    As a side project, we decided to characterize a previous team’s work on an existing biobrick. For that purpose, we chose to characterize the University of Washington’s Petrobrick. The Petrobrick, once transformed into E. coli, acts as a microbial alkane production pathway. Two enzymes are co-transformed to create this biobrick: Acyl-ACP Reductase (AAR - Bba_K90032) and Aldehyde De-Carbonylase (ADC - Bba_K90031).

    AAR reduces cellular fatty acyl-ACP from bacterial fatty acid via into fatty aldehydes. ADC then removes the carbonyl group on the fatty aldehyde, resulting in an odd number alkane chain one carbon shorter than the original Acyl-ACP fatty acid. In turn, both of the enzymes convert fatty acids into an odd number alkane by means of a constitutive protein expression plasmid.

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