Team:SDU-Denmark/labwork/Constructs

From 2012.igem.org

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<h2>Data For Our Favorite New Parts</h2>
<h2>Data For Our Favorite New Parts</h2>
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<a href="http://partsregistry.org/wiki/index.php?title=Part:BBa_K899011"><b>Part:BBa_K899011</b></a>
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<a href="http://partsregistry.org/wiki/index.php?title=Part:BBa_K899005"><b>Part:BBa_K899005</b></a>
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<a href="http://partsregistry.org/wiki/index.php?title=Part:BBa_K899006"><b>Part:BBa_K899006</b></a>
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Revision as of 00:45, 27 September 2012

iGEM TEAM ::: SDU-DENMARK courtesy of NIAID


Constructs



The System

The above picture illustrates our idealized system the way we wanted it to be . It consists of two plasmids with FFT and SST respectively. Both plasmids have a toxin-antitoxin system introduced which works as a form of safety to prevent horizontal gene transfer (read more about it further down the page). The two enzymes, FFT and SST, produce together the non-digestible inulin from sucrose. Along with the two plasmids there is also a sigma-E gene that functions as a regulator gene in our kill-switch system.

The sigma-E is an alternative sigma factor that controls the extracytoplasmic stress response in E. coli. The idea is to have an L-Rhamnose sensitive promoter that expresses this essential gene.

The L-Rhamnose would be in the yoghurt with our bacteria and function as a limiting lifetime for the consumed bacteria. L-Rhamnose is a non-digestible sugar which passes through the system and thereby inactivates the sigma-E gene. The consumed bacteria from the yoghurt would inevitably die after a while.

Data For Our Favorite New Parts

Part:BBa_K899011 Part:BBa_K899005 Part:BBa_K899006


Data For Pre-existing Parts




Killswitch

During the construction of a killswitch, we stumbled upon a very concerning fact. A normal killswitch inducible by a promoter can be rendered useless in the case of frameshift mutations (and any other mutation, that affects the gene-product). Therefore we chose to construct killswitches with a less likely chance of being frameshifted out of order.