Team:Purdue/Notebook
From 2012.igem.org
(→Monday, June 4) |
(→Monday, June 4) |
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* Welcomed Bio Builders workshop participants | * Welcomed Bio Builders workshop participants | ||
* Janie gave a powerpoint on the basics of synthetic biology to the workshop participants | * Janie gave a powerpoint on the basics of synthetic biology to the workshop participants | ||
- | * Amanda, August, Max, Mrudula, and Rachel helped the participants with an experiment based on MIT's 2006 iGEM project, a banana scent generator. | + | * Amanda, August, Max, Mrudula, and Rachel helped the participants with an experiment based on MIT's 2006 iGEM project, a banana scent generator |
+ | |||
+ | == Tuesday, June 5 == | ||
+ | * Amanda, August, Mrudula, Rachel, and Soo spent the morning watching presentations on abstraction and devices with the Bio Builder workshop participants | ||
+ | * Soo gave a presentation to the participants on how to use TinkerCell | ||
+ | * The iGEM team helped the Bio Builder participants to transform green and purple fluorescent protein into E. coli | ||
+ | |||
+ | * Created a timeline for the rest of the summer as seen below | ||
+ | ** Week 3: | ||
+ | *** Design and order primers for Gibson assembly | ||
+ | *** Order reagents | ||
+ | *** Complete a miniprep for the previously transformed parts | ||
+ | *** Select plasmid backbones | ||
+ | ** Week 4: | ||
+ | *** PCR parts for Gibson assembly | ||
+ | *** Begin Gibson assembly | ||
+ | *** decide on which parts will be synthetic | ||
+ | ** Week 5: | ||
+ | *** Complete plasmid midi and mega preps | ||
+ | *** Transform parts into expression vectors | ||
+ | ** Week 6: | ||
+ | *** COmplete functional analysis of protein expression | ||
+ | *** Construct the full system | ||
+ | ** Week 7: | ||
+ | *** Build the flow system for biofilm establishment | ||
+ | *** Complet functional analysis of biofilm thickness | ||
+ | ** Week 8-10: | ||
+ | *** Iterate and improve on flow setup |
Revision as of 20:03, 5 June 2012
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You should make use of the calendar feature on the wiki and start a lab notebook. This may be looked at by the judges to see how your work progressed throughout the summer. It is a very useful organizational tool as well.
Contents |
Monday, May 15
List of useful contacts on the google doc, including DowAgro
Begin to list the different devices/constructs that will be used in our project
Attachment (adhesion)
Filtration
- Modularize the sequence so we can test individually (e.g. but GFP, RFP, YFP at the end of each segment – construct silica binding protein first with constitutive promoter/repressible promoter to produce promoter and make sure it does what you think it should)
- Investigate multiple silica binding protein (surface protein – silica binding peptide);must choose several top candidates for each element.
Hierarchy
Perfecting the FFL
- And (low affinity, not dimer), Or (high affinity)
- Schematic Diagram
Modeling and Experimental
- Communication in terms of data (e.g. kinetic parameters)
- Review Characterization Data Sheets (look in the DropBox for an uploaded link from Sean )
- Strong integration of modeling translates to a strong performance in the competition.
List of things we need
- Competent Cells (Laris Avramova (core molecular biologist, 222), Tarun (electron microscopy)may have the needed cells)
- Antibiotics (AMP, tetracycline)
- Enzymes (Pst1, Xba1, EcoR1, Spe1, Ligase, polymerase/PCR reagents, T5exonuclease )
- Parts (available in the registry)
- Constitutive promoter (orthogonal t7 promoter)
- Signaling Promoters (investigate the precedent for construction FFL)
- RBS –(B0034)
- Thermodynamic models for designing RBSs, etc (Voights model)
- Terminators
- Proteins Transcription Factors
Monday, May 21
- We're all looking forward to an exciting iGEM summer! Our SURF students have just arrived and are gradually being introduced to synthetic biology and iGEM.
- Sean gave a crash course on synthetic biology to Mrudula, Rachel, Amanda and August. The powerpoint is available here, compiled by our wonderful graduate mentor, Janie.
Tuesday, May 22
- First Journal Club Meeting - Identified the reducible elements of our system
- Detailed outline of the project to the SURF students
- What is the advantage of using this entire process? Is not it kind of roundabout?
- Diagram of complete device was shown
For the NEXT MEETING Tuesday 29th May :
- Identify, in these teams:
a. What Adhesion system we want to use (Amanda, Peter, Mrudula)
b. Which silica-binding system we want to use (Rachel, August)
c. Control Elements (Max, Mrudula, Rachel, Sean)
d. Find strain auxotrophic for RSC (gene which breaks down arabinose) (Jim)
Announcements:
- Be ready to explain your assigned element of the project (starting generally and moving more specifically)
- Read the introductory/background elements of the thesis that Dr. Rickus will put in the dropbox General Announcements
- Be ready to work the BioBuilder HighSchool Teacher iGEM workshop during the week of June 4th – June 8th (more details to come)
- Everyone is welcome to visit Drs. Rickus and Clase’s lab group meeting on Thursday at 12PM
Thursday May 24th
Update on the human practice component available through the Powerpoint
Tuesday, May 29
Overview of small group presentations
Adhesion Proteins – Amanda, Mrudula, and Peter
- Ag43 : [University of Queensland 2009] PROS: makes chains instead of aggregates, works well in flow, in the registry, abiotic adherence CONS: not concomitant
- TibA: PROS: modular, concomitant, auto-transport CONS: not in the registry
- AIDA-1: PROS: binds Ag43 and self, in registry, higher shear tolerance CONS: only expressed in certain cells, blocked by Fimbriae (due to length)
- FimA-H: [Michigan 2010] PROS: forms chains, compatible w/ E. coli, shear resistant, grows in constant flow, binds well to glycoproteins CONS: inhibits function of other proteins
- Curli: [Lyons 2011] PROS: well characterized in registry, amyloid fibers CONS: inhibits Ag43 and AIDA-1
Decision:
- primary: AIDA-1 [order from registry and improve bad sequencing or re-synthesize] ====
- secondary (if AIDA-1 proves unfeasible): TibA [with goal of characterizing part, must synthesize]
Silica Binding Proteins – Rachel and August
- INP – Silicatein [MN 2011] – PROS: CONS: very large, no data on viability, not biobrick compatible.
- OmpA-Silicatein alpha fusion – PROS: shorter than INP-Silicatein, active in neutral pH, no illegal sites, known to work CONS: must construct fusion peptide vector NOTES: optimum at low temperatures [OmpA - K103006]
- R5 peptide: PROS: active at neutral pH, small, has been used in E. coli CONS: part of a larger protein (no silaffin post-translational modifications), contains EcoRI site
Modeling the Network Motif - Max, Mrudula, Rachel, and Sean
- Modeled the simplified system
- Matlab and MathCad Model
- Need concrete entry parameters for more robust models
For Next week:
- Construct your parts in DNA 2.0 and anything in registry start detailing
Wednesday, May 30
- In Lab:
- Cleaned and organized the laboratory space
- Ordered laboratory suppleies
- Made LB agar plates and LB liquid media with ampicillin
- Created the adhesions and SBP devices in silico using Gene Designer by DNA 2.0
Thursday, May 31
- Attended Rickus and Porterfielt laboratory group meeting
- Each person introduced themselves and their research
- Decided on the use of future meetings
- Researched primer design and began to design primers. These primers will be used for PCR to perform the Gibson assembly method
Friday, June 1
- Performed Cell Transformations of the following parts:
- Lac promotor and CFP generator (BBa_I13601)
- PoPs receiver (BBa_F2620)
- Tet repressor (BBa_C0040)
- Tet promotor with green fluorescent protein (BBa_I13522)
- Protocol:
1) Add 50μL of DH5α to 1μL of DNA 2) Sit solution on ice for 20-30 minutes 3) Heat shock the solution at 42°C for 45 seconds 4) Return the solution to ic for 2 minutes 5) Add 200μL of SOC 6) Shake at 37°C and 200rpm for 1 hour 7) Plate 100-150μL of samples onto agar dishes
- Completed Primer Sequences for surface expression protein
Monday, June 4
- Welcomed Bio Builders workshop participants
- Janie gave a powerpoint on the basics of synthetic biology to the workshop participants
- Amanda, August, Max, Mrudula, and Rachel helped the participants with an experiment based on MIT's 2006 iGEM project, a banana scent generator
Tuesday, June 5
- Amanda, August, Mrudula, Rachel, and Soo spent the morning watching presentations on abstraction and devices with the Bio Builder workshop participants
- Soo gave a presentation to the participants on how to use TinkerCell
- The iGEM team helped the Bio Builder participants to transform green and purple fluorescent protein into E. coli
- Created a timeline for the rest of the summer as seen below
- Week 3:
- Design and order primers for Gibson assembly
- Order reagents
- Complete a miniprep for the previously transformed parts
- Select plasmid backbones
- Week 4:
- PCR parts for Gibson assembly
- Begin Gibson assembly
- decide on which parts will be synthetic
- Week 5:
- Complete plasmid midi and mega preps
- Transform parts into expression vectors
- Week 6:
- COmplete functional analysis of protein expression
- Construct the full system
- Week 7:
- Build the flow system for biofilm establishment
- Complet functional analysis of biofilm thickness
- Week 8-10:
- Iterate and improve on flow setup
- Week 3: