Team:Johns Hopkins-Wetware/lightproject
From 2012.igem.org
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Today’s increasingly complex research and manipulation of biological pathways poses a demand for rapid, controllable gain and loss of biomolecular function. Bioengineering of pathways for industrial processes is hindered due to lack of understanding of non-native proteins in the yeast chassis. Optimizing pathways and adjusting expression of relevant proteins is a tedious task. The 2012 JHU iGEM team set about developing a tool to facilitate optimization and controlling flux of pathways in order to maximize efficiency of manufacture. | Today’s increasingly complex research and manipulation of biological pathways poses a demand for rapid, controllable gain and loss of biomolecular function. Bioengineering of pathways for industrial processes is hindered due to lack of understanding of non-native proteins in the yeast chassis. Optimizing pathways and adjusting expression of relevant proteins is a tedious task. The 2012 JHU iGEM team set about developing a tool to facilitate optimization and controlling flux of pathways in order to maximize efficiency of manufacture. | ||
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- | < | + | <h6><b>Focusing on Optogenetics</b></h6> |
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- | + | TULIPs stands for TUnable, Light-controlled Interacting Protein Tags. The first of the “tags” is the photoswitchable LOV2 domain of AsLOV2, which is a phototropin from Avena sativa. When hit with 470 nm light, the J-alpha helical domain loosens from the rest of the protein, leaving it available for interaction with other molecules. | |
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+ | The engineered PDZ (ePDZ) protein is the other major component of this system. It will bind to a short peptide epitope (–SSADTWV–COOH) or certain truncations of this epitope when epitope is available. By fusing this short epitope to the C-terminal of the J-alpha domain, we can take advantage of LOV2’s active and inactive states to expose and hide (respectively) the epitope from the ePDZ domain. When the light shines, the epitope is immediately exposed to bind with its partner, ePDZ. When the 470 nm light turns off, the epitope, which is literally an extension of the J-alpha helix, snaps back to the LOV2 domain, dissociating from ePDZ. | ||
+ | </p> | ||
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+ | One of the advantages of TULIPs that makes it favorable to other systems is that it is tunable. In Strickland (2012) (1), various ePDZ mutants and truncations of the short peptide epitope were tested. Caging and binding ratios varied pre- and post-excitation. Although we only chose to use one ePDZ variant, we made our choice by reviewing characterizations of each variant. We based our choice on a) proportion of change between caging ratios pre- and post-excitation, b) how little binding there is in the absence of photoexcitation (closer to control is best), and c) how high the incidence of binding is. We chose ePDZb1, and decided to try out other mutants when we had found some of our experimental constructs successful. | ||
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+ | We employ three main strategies to photo-switchably turn the functionality of a given protein on and off: | ||
+ | <br>1. Splitting the protein and fusing each portion to either LOVpep or ePDZ, and dimerizing the protein with photoexcitation. Although there is no guarantee that two separately-transcribed parts of a protein will be a functional unit when dimerized, we were encouraged by a similar and successful experiment that used CRY2 and CIB1 as the light-inducible components and Cre recombinase as the photoswitchable protein, whose halves were fused to either CRY2 or CIB1 (Tucker, et al. 2010). We better our chances of success by attempting multiple splitting points, and avoiding functional domains of the protein. We also try to split away from the ends of the protein, so that one part might not be functional without its partner. | ||
+ | <br>Fusing each “tag” to different proteins. When the tags are dimerized, function or transport of at least one protein is inhibited. | ||
+ | <br>Tethering LOVpep to the plasma membrane by fusing it to a transmembrane domain at the N-terminus, as was done in Strickland (2012), and fusing the whole target protein to ePDZ. Upon photoexcitation, the cytosolic fusion protein is sequestered by the membrane-bound LOVpep, rendering it functionally silent. | ||
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<img src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2012/9/91/Jhuigem2012TULIPs-diagram.png"/> | <img src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2012/9/91/Jhuigem2012TULIPs-diagram.png"/> |