Team:Grenoble/Modeling/Amplification
From 2012.igem.org
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- | As we designed a biosensor, when the molecule to detect is detected by our bacterium, our bacterium will send us a signal. This signal is a green light. Our bacterium activates the production of a protein, called | + | As we designed a biosensor, when the molecule to detect is detected by our bacterium, our bacterium will send us a signal. This signal is a green light. Our bacterium activates the production of a protein, called GFP, which makes it become green. In our system the production of GFP begins when the production of an other protein, the adenylate cyclase (Ca) begins. Indeed, they are under the control of the same promotor, paraBAD, and thus they have exatly the same behavior: |
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- | The protein | + | The protein GFP is only the protein that enables us to control the behavior of the adenylate cyclase. Thus, in the development, I won’t speak about the gfp, but always about the adenylate cyclase, and we will consider that the adenylate cyclase gives us the signal. |
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- | As soon as some cAMP is produced, it will start a new production of adenylate cyclase, which will catalyse the production of cAMP and so forth. We had enough cAMP! However, if some adenylate cyclase was produced though it shouldn’t (because of the promotor let off for example), the system would have started start. Thus, we needed to increase the robustness of our system to false positives. We added a classic feed forward loop. The production of the aenylate cyclase would begin if and only if there is enough cAMP AND enough of an intermediary protein, here | + | As soon as some cAMP is produced, it will start a new production of adenylate cyclase, which will catalyse the production of cAMP and so forth. We had enough cAMP! However, if some adenylate cyclase was produced though it shouldn’t (because of the promotor let off for example), the system would have started start. Thus, we needed to increase the robustness of our system to false positives. We added a classic feed forward loop. The production of the aenylate cyclase would begin if and only if there is enough cAMP AND enough of an intermediary protein, here AraC. We finally got: |
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Revision as of 21:34, 25 September 2012