Team:Amsterdam/modeling/generaldesign

From 2012.igem.org

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== Extending the idea to multiple bits ==
== Extending the idea to multiple bits ==
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Extending the design idea further, we realized that it should be possible to register and store the presence of multiple signals smultaneously in a single cell. By fusing DNA binding proteins to the methyltransferase and adding their corresponding DNA binding motifs to the bit regions of the DNA. Either traditional bacterial transcriptional regulators could be used for this purpose or the Zinc-Finger Array (ZFA) technology [[#Fu|1]]. ZFA allows the construction of highly specific artificial protein-DNA interactions (Kaseniit, Perli, and Lu 2011). By fusing the MTase to a Zinc Finger or traditional transcriptional regulator and extending the bit region with the transcriptional regulator’s binding motif, the binding affinity of the fusion protein for the DNA motif could increase about 18-fold (McNamara et al. 2002) (A C5-cytosine MTase was studied here, not in the class of N4C-MTases to which M.ScaI belongs). This will heavily diminish the possible aspecific cross-talk between FPs and bits assigned to other FPs. The same MTase could then be used for different signals with a very low chance of cross-talk between FPs and other signals’ bits.
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Extending the design idea further, we realized that it should be possible to register and store the presence of multiple signals smultaneously in a single cell. By fusing DNA binding proteins to the methyltransferase and adding their corresponding DNA binding motifs to the bit regions of the DNA. Either traditional bacterial transcriptional regulators could be used for this purpose or the Zinc-Finger Array (ZFA) technology [[[#Fu|1]]]. ZFA allows the construction of highly specific artificial protein-DNA interactions (Kaseniit, Perli, and Lu 2011). By fusing the MTase to a Zinc Finger or traditional transcriptional regulator and extending the bit region with the transcriptional regulator’s binding motif, the binding affinity of the fusion protein for the DNA motif could increase about 18-fold [[[#McNamara|2]]]. A C5-cytosine MTase was studied here, not in the class of N4C-MTases to which M.ScaI belongs. This will heavily diminish the possible aspecific cross-talk between FPs and bits assigned to other FPs. The same MTase could then be used for different signals with a very low chance of cross-talk between FPs and other signals’ bits.
Part more specific on read out, unique band lengths
Part more specific on read out, unique band lengths
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<sup>Fu, Fengli, Jeffry D. Sander, Morgan Maeder, Stacey Thibodeau-Beganny, J. Keith Joung, Drena Dobbs, Leslie Miller, and Daniel F. Voytas. 2009. “Zinc Finger Database (ZiFDB): a repository for information on C2H2 zinc fingers and engineered zinc-finger arrays.” ''Nucleic acids research'' 37 (jan): 279. doi:10.1093/nar/gkn606. [[http://www.pubmedcentral.nih.gov/articlerender.fcgi?artid=2686427\&tool=pmcentrez\&rendertype=abstract|http://www.pubmedcentral.nih.gov/articlerender.fcgi?artid=2686427\&amp;tool=pmcentrez\&amp;rendertype=abstract]]</sup>
<sup>Fu, Fengli, Jeffry D. Sander, Morgan Maeder, Stacey Thibodeau-Beganny, J. Keith Joung, Drena Dobbs, Leslie Miller, and Daniel F. Voytas. 2009. “Zinc Finger Database (ZiFDB): a repository for information on C2H2 zinc fingers and engineered zinc-finger arrays.” ''Nucleic acids research'' 37 (jan): 279. doi:10.1093/nar/gkn606. [[http://www.pubmedcentral.nih.gov/articlerender.fcgi?artid=2686427\&tool=pmcentrez\&rendertype=abstract|http://www.pubmedcentral.nih.gov/articlerender.fcgi?artid=2686427\&amp;tool=pmcentrez\&amp;rendertype=abstract]]</sup>
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<sup>McNamara, A. R., Hurd, P. J., Smith, A. E. F., & Ford, K. G. (2002). Characterisation of site-biased DNA methyltransferases: specificity, affinity and subsite relationships. Nucleic acids research, 30(17), 3818–30. Retrieved from http://www.pubmedcentral.nih.gov/articlerender.fcgi?artid=137423&tool=pmcentrez&rendertype=abstract
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Revision as of 14:04, 23 September 2012