Team:Goettingen/Project
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Language: <img height="20", src="http://www.patrickreinke.de/igem/eng.jpg"> English, <img height="20", src="http://www.patrickreinke.de/igem/deu.jpg"> <a href="https://2012.igem.org/Team:Goettingen/Project_deu">Deutsch</a> <br> | Language: <img height="20", src="http://www.patrickreinke.de/igem/eng.jpg"> English, <img height="20", src="http://www.patrickreinke.de/igem/deu.jpg"> <a href="https://2012.igem.org/Team:Goettingen/Project_deu">Deutsch</a> <br> | ||
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<h2><b><a name="Chemotaxis"></a>Chemotaxis</b></h2> | <h2><b><a name="Chemotaxis"></a>Chemotaxis</b></h2> | ||
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(Attractant gradient is shown in green.) [1]<br><br></b></center> | (Attractant gradient is shown in green.) [1]<br><br></b></center> | ||
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Revision as of 08:40, 21 September 2012
Deutsch / English |
Our Project
Our project was born from the idea to create a real champion: the fastest E. coli in the world. As funny as this may sound first,
soon we were at the development of an ambitious plan to create our "Homing Coli" and apply its speed for selective purposes.
The ultimate goal was a fast swimming E. coli strain which would be able to recognize specific molecules on a mutagenized
receptor and head towards gradients of these substances on swimming agar plates. If this approach worked, it might be put to use
for the recognition of various molecules such as pollutants, toxins or even cancer cell markers. As our planning moved on, we soon
created three different focus groups which should work in parallel on the biggest and most crucial components of our project.
The first group focuses on the creation of effective swimming motility assays. All kinds of different media and swimming agar
plates were to be tested, because fast E. coli can only show their potential under the right conditions. Furthermore, an
efficient selection system should be created in order to separate the fast E. coli from the slower ones and to test potential
attractants for our swimmers.
Creation of a fast strain represents the main task for the second group. The main question here is: which genes have the potential
to make our E. coli faster and how do they need to be regulated to achieve this? Naturally, genes that code for parts of
the bacterial motor, the flagellum, were selected for testing as well as FlhDC, a master regulator for motility and chemotaxis.
The output is then measured as motility on the first group's swimming plates.
The last group focuses on the directed mutagenesis of the aspartate receptor Tar. Thereby, a library of numerous different and new Tar
receptors can be created. Some of these might exhibit the ability to recognize a specific substance of interest. E. coli
strains possessing such mutated receptors can then be screened for homing ability towards a selection of chemical compounds.
These three groups would focus mostly on their separate projects during the early phases of lab-work and also plan their schedules
independently to minimize frictional losses. But as time progresses and the first results are obtained the work of our focus groups
overlaps more and more in order to achieve our ultimate goal: the creation of Homing Coli.
Chemotaxis
Sensing and the mechanism of chemotaxis |
Figure 1: Chemotaxis of E. coli. (a) When no attractant is present E. coli switches from direct swimming to tumbling randomly.
(b) In the presence of an attractant E. coli moves through the gradient in the direction of the attractant.
(Attractant gradient is shown in green.) [1] |
Chemotaxis is based on high-order intracellular signaling structures. Clustered receptors in the cell wall of bacteria sense signals and mediate downstream signaling in the cell via associated proteins in a highly cooperative manner [2]. These high-order intracellular signaling structures are also known as two-component systems. |
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Figure 2: Schematic structure of a two-component system. A histidine kinase (HK) serves as sensing structure for
attractants or repellents and mediates downstream signaling to autokinase (red). The response regulator (RR) consists of a receiver
(purple) and an output module (green) which if activated induces gene expression [2].
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Poster
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