Team:TU-Eindhoven/LEC/LabTheory

From 2012.igem.org

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<h3>Design challenge</h3>
<h3>Design challenge</h3>
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<p>The aim of this project is to design and produce a new multi-color display in which genetically engineered cells function as pixels analogous to a conventional display. In the lab we will create cells that emit light in response to an electric stimulus. This can be achieved by genetic modification of yeast cells, through the introduction of fluorescent calcium sensors and utilizing the already present calcium channels.</p>
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<p>The aim of this project is to design and produce a new multi-color display in which genetically engineered cells function as pixels analogous to a conventional display. In the lab we will create cells that emit light in response to an electric stimulus. This can be achieved by genetic modification of yeast cells, through the introduction of fluorescent calcium sensors and utilizing the already present calcium channels. On top of our great endeavor an other innovative aspect is the fact that our system responds to exogeneous stimuli instead of the more traditional systems which respond to intracellular processes.</p>
<p>The plasma membrane of the brewer's yeast <i>Saccharomyces cerevisiae</i> contains the CCH1-MID1 channel that is homologous to mammalian voltage-gated calcium channels (VGCCs). It is hypothesized that upon depolarization of the plasma membrane calcium ions selectively enter the cytoplasm through these channels<html><a href="#ref_Iida"name="text_Iida"><sup>[1]</sup></a></html>. Light will be emitted by fluorescence of the GECO protein<html><a href="#ref_zhao"name="text_zhao"><sup>[2]</sup></a></html>, a calcium dependent fluorescent protein that is expressed from a genetically engineered plasmid. When this calcium sensor is exposed to an elevated intracellular calcium concentration its fluorescence will increase significantly; consequently when the calcium concentration drops its fluorescence will diminish. The calcium can enter the cell's cytoplasm upon electrical stimulation of the calcium channel, after which the GECO protein will start to fluoresce. Finally the excess of calcium will be removed by active transport within the cell to restore it's homeostatic level, and the amount of fluorescence will decrease.</p>
<p>The plasma membrane of the brewer's yeast <i>Saccharomyces cerevisiae</i> contains the CCH1-MID1 channel that is homologous to mammalian voltage-gated calcium channels (VGCCs). It is hypothesized that upon depolarization of the plasma membrane calcium ions selectively enter the cytoplasm through these channels<html><a href="#ref_Iida"name="text_Iida"><sup>[1]</sup></a></html>. Light will be emitted by fluorescence of the GECO protein<html><a href="#ref_zhao"name="text_zhao"><sup>[2]</sup></a></html>, a calcium dependent fluorescent protein that is expressed from a genetically engineered plasmid. When this calcium sensor is exposed to an elevated intracellular calcium concentration its fluorescence will increase significantly; consequently when the calcium concentration drops its fluorescence will diminish. The calcium can enter the cell's cytoplasm upon electrical stimulation of the calcium channel, after which the GECO protein will start to fluoresce. Finally the excess of calcium will be removed by active transport within the cell to restore it's homeostatic level, and the amount of fluorescence will decrease.</p>

Revision as of 00:04, 27 September 2012