Team:Evry/FrenchFrog

From 2012.igem.org

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The Evry iGEM team is proud to introduce you to our new project:</b><br/><br/>
 
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<h1><b><u>The French froggies project</b></u></h1>
 
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</center>
 
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<h2>Establishment of a new chassis</b></h2><br/>
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<center><h1><b><i>Xenopus tropicalis</i>: A new multicellular chassis</b></h1></center>
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<p>So far, synthetic biology has mostly focused on bacteria, since they are simple to engineer. iGEM teams and laboratories have worked on unicellular organisms in order to understand the underlying biology and have developed an impressive database of molecular parts. Some work has also been done on engineering mammalian cells and a few iGEM teams have followed this trend. Synthetic biologists are now imagining the rational design of multicellular organisms with numerous applications ranging from gene therapy or drug production to environmental monitoring. This year, our team would like to be part of that challenge.</p>
+
<h2>Establishment of a new chassis</b></h2><br/>
-
<p>The arrival of <i>Xenopus</i> as a chassis in synthetic biology requires the creation of new standards and protocols that the community will be able to build on. We provided the registry with such tools that allow rapid construction and characterization of devices in vivo, and include debugging tools. We think they will be very useful for later iGEM teams and synthetic biologists who wish to work with <i>Xenopus</i> for building multicellular systems.</p>
+
<p>So far, synthetic biology has mostly focused on bacteria, since they are simple to engineer. iGEM teams and laboratories have met synthetic biology laboratories on unicellular organisms in order to understand the underlying biology and have developed an impressive database of molecular parts. Some work has also been done on engineering mammalian cells and a few iGEM teams have followed this trend. Synthetic biologists are now imagining the rational design of multicellular organisms with numerous applications ranging from gene therapy or drug production to environmental monitoring. This year, our team would like to be part of that challenge.</p>
-
<p>You want to make the move from bacteria to multicellular synthetic biology ? Make sure you check out our Introduction to <i>Xenopus</i> page, and our Frogs for dummies page to make sure you are aware of all the differences between genetic engineering in eukaryotes.</p>  
+
<p>The arrival of <i>Xenopus</i> as a chassis in synthetic biology requires the creation of new standards and protocols that the community will be able to build on. We provided the registry with such tools that allow rapid construction and characterization of devices in vivo, and include debugging tools. We think they will be very useful for later iGEM teams and synthetic biologists who wish to work with <i>Xenopus</i> for building multicellular systems.</p>
-
<p>This year, the Evry iGEM team is going to be the one of the first iGEM team to work on a vertebrate. Our work is focused both on developing a system for intercellular and inter-tissue communication, and creating the tools for the iGEM community to easily express genes in specific tissues. We believe the tadpole is a chassis of choice for iGEM on multi cellular organisms, as experiments can be conducted in one week using microinjection methods. We hope to demonstrate the feasibility of engineering <i> Xenopus </i> in one summer for an iGEM project, and to create a great tool for multicellular synthetic biology: <a href="https://2012.igem.org/Team:Evry/AIDSystem">A synthetic, orthogonal hormonal system.</a> </p>
+
                <p>A multi-tissular systems allows testing protein effect into an animal. The expression/degradation of a protein (a protein fused to GFP in example) can be followed in the organism. <i>Xenopus</i> can be used as a biosensor, Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) plan to validate an assay capable of <a href="http://www.oecd.org/chemicalsafety/testingofchemicals/41620749.pdf">detecting thyroid disruptor using <i>Xenopus</i></a>. With our plasmid it is easy to test in 5 days a promoter or/and a reporter in the new chassis <i>xenopus</i> because it contains a working immune/vascular/neurologic/nephrologic/digestive systems.
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<br/>
+
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<h2>The simple molecular strategy to build eukaryotic plasmid ready to use: </h2>
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<!-- <p>You want to make the move from bacteria to multicellular synthetic biology ? Make sure you check out our Introduction to <i>Xenopus</i> page, and our Frogs for dummies page to make sure you are aware of all the differences between genetic engineering in eukaryotes.</p> -->
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<br/><br/><br/>
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<a href="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2012/0/0e/French_froggies_scheme2.1.png" target="_blank">
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<img src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2012/0/0e/French_froggies_scheme2.1.png" alt="Image unavailable" width="950px" /> </a><br/><br/><br/><br/>
+
 +
<p>This year, the Evry iGEM team is going to be the one of the first iGEM team to work on a vertebrate. Our work is focused both on developing a system for intercellular and intertissue communication, and creating the tools for the iGEM community to easily express genes in specific tissues. We believe the tadpole is a chassis of choice for iGEM on multicellular organisms, as experiments can be conducted in one week using microinjection methods. We hope to demonstrate the feasibility of engineering <i> Xenopus </i> in one summer for an iGEM project, and to create a great tool for multicellular synthetic biology:
 +
<a href="https://2012.igem.org/Team:Evry/AIDSystem">An orthogonal hormonal system</a>.
 +
</p><br/>
-
<center>
 
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<h2>Characterization of a plasmid</h><br/>
 
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</center>
 
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<br/>
 
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<p>Embryos were not fed during all the week of experiment, they grew up with their own vitellus. Pictures were taken with the Zeiss stereomicroscope: SteREO Lumar V12 with the camera AxioCamMR3.</p><br/>
 
-
<p>The <a href="https://2012.igem.org/Team:Evry/InjectionTuto">injection tutorial</a> explains very simply with diagram how we did injection and how take care about your embryos and tadpole. The experiment carries on 5 days, from the  unfertilized egg to a swimming tadpole at <a href="https://2012.igem.org/Team:Evry/Stages">stage 48-50</a>. The GFP (or other fluorescent protein) is expressed  few hours after the fertilization to the end of the week (see below).<br/>
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<a name="plasmid" /><h3>The simple molecular strategy to build eukaryotic plasmid ready to use: </h3></a>
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The iGEM-Evry team say a great thanks to Dr. Nicolas Pollet, Dr. Aurore Thelie and Lena Vouillot (PhD student) who taught us how to inject embryos, how to take care of tadpoles and how to use their microscopes. They are from <a href="http://www.issb.genopole.fr/">Institute of Systems & Synthetic Biology</a> of Evry in the <a href="http://indigene.issb.genopole.fr/">Metamorphosys</a> group.</p>
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<p>
-
<br/>
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<br/><i>Xenopus tropicalis</i> represents a challenge as it is a vertebrate but also because it's a new chassis in the iGEM competition. To make sure we meet iGEM’s expectations on time, we have had to develop a new biobrick plasmid backbone compatible with<i> Xenopus tropicalis</i> (but also others vertebrate and fish). The plasmid is produced in bacteria then purified and injected into <i>Xenopus</i>'s eggs. The plasmid can not replicate in eukaryotic cells. As origins of replication are cryptic in <i>Xenopus</i>, the plasmid does not replicate. Therefore, it is only active in the first two or three weeks of development, as the injected plasmid is passed on randomly to daughter cells. After that, it becomes too diluted.
 +
<br/><br/></p>
 +
<a href="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2012/0/0e/French_froggies_scheme2.1.png" target="_blank">
 +
<img src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2012/0/0e/French_froggies_scheme2.1.png" alt="Image unavailable" width="950px" /> </a><br/>
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<h2>Plasmid injected: pCS2+ with CMV promoter and GFP-aid reporter</h2><br/>
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<ul>
-
 
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<li><b>Kozac</b> : The Kozak consensus sequence is essential for the initiation of the translation process in eukaryotes. The sequence is the following (gcc)gccRccAUGG, where upper case letters are highly-conserved bases, and lower case letter can vary</li><br/>
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<p>We injected 2.3 nl of plasmids at 100ng.µl-1 - embryos were stored at 21°C during all the experiment.<br/>
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<li><b>Promoter </b>: The promoter of a gene is located upstream of this gene and initiate its transcription. The promoter is surrounded by the enzyme restriction sites <b>SalI</b> and <b>HindIII</b> in order to be able to switch more easily to other promoters</li><br/>
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pCS2+ GFP-aid: contains the constitutive and ubiquitous promoter CMV and the aid sequenced of the aid system fusionned to GFP (Green Fluorescent Protein)(Nishimura et al., 2009), this Biobrick created by our team is <a href="http://partsregistry.org/wiki/index.php?title=Part:BBa_K812010">BBa_K812010</a>, and it was integrated into our Eucaryotic plasmid <a href="http://partsregistry.org/wiki/index.php?title=Part:BBa_K812000">BBa_K812000</a> .
+
<li><b>5'UTR and 3’UTR</b> : UTRs are Untranslated Region. The B-globin 5' UTR is located upstream of the coding sequence and is involved in 5'RNA capping. The 3'UTR is located downstream of the coding sequence and may contain sequences for the regulation of translation efficiency, mRNA stability, and polyadenylation signals</li><br/>
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We injected about 3.78E+7 plasmids.</p>
+
<li><b>SV40 PolyA signal</b> : The simian virus 40 polyadenylation signal is involved in the maturation of the mRNA for translation and is composed of a succession of adenine bases </li><br/>
 +
<li><b>Antibiotic resistance genes</b> : This sequence is necessary for the selection of transformed bacteria exposed to the antibiotic</li><br/>
 +
<li><b>Biobrick prefix and suffix</b></li><br/>
 +
<li><b>Origin of replication</b> : This origin of replication is bacterial, this sequence initiates the replication of DNA</li><br/>
 +
By putting all the parts necessary for expression in eukaryotes, we have made plasmids where any coding biobrick (containing Kozak sequence) can be cloned in directly without having to transfer each parts individually. These plasmids can be used to rapidly test genetic constructions in<i> Xenopus tropicalis</i> after a single cloning.<br/> It is possible to easily change promoter with the restriction sites SalI and HindIII. <br/>
 +
The plasmid also contains tools to calibrate the system in combination with a model. For instance, it contains sites for in vitro transcription (sp6 sites) of genes to make RNA that can then be injected directly in the embryo, allowing a much finer control of the ratio between levels of different genes during construct testing. <br/>
 +
<br/>
 +
To test it, inject 2.3 nL of 100 ng.uL-1 plasmid solution into the one cell embryo following the <a href="https://2012.igem.org/Team:Evry/InjectionTuto" target="_blank">injecting tutorial</a>.For a plasmid of 4kb it represents approximately 45 million of plasmids per injection. As the cell divides, plasmids are shared between cells but not replicated so a high concentration of DNA is necessary to ensure there will be DNA in most of the organism. Once the transcription machinery turns on during the development, plasmids are transcribed and translated. Since the tadpole stage starts after a few days, we can work on a whole vertebrate with most organs formed within a week. With different tissues it is possible to diversify the type of expression with different promoters.
 +
<br/>
 +
<br/>
 +
So far we have made 3 new plasmid backbones with different promoters :
 +
<br/><br/>
 +
<li>With a <b>CMV promoter</b> for an ubiquitous expression :
 +
(<a href="http://partsregistry.org/Part:BBa_K812000" target="_blank">BBa_K812000</a>),
 +
<li>With a <b>Hsp70 promoter</b> for an inducible expression :
 +
(<a href="http://partsregistry.org/Part:BBa_K812300" target="_blank">BBa_K812300</a>),
 +
<li>With a <b>Elastase promoter</b> for a tissue specific expression :
 +
(<a href="http://partsregistry.org/Part:BBa_K812200" target="_blank">BBa_K812200</a>). </p></li>
<br/>
<br/>
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<h2>pCS2+ GFP-aid</h2>
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Our goal was to provide tools which would allow to rapidly build and characterize constructs in the embryos (along with a synthetic hormone to make them communicate), with tools for debugging (by injecting mRNA) and with ubiquitous, inducible and tissue specific promoters.
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<h3>24h after injection</h3><br/>
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</ul>
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Embryos are around <a href="https://2012.igem.org/Team:Evry/Stages">stage 20</a>, neural fold is visible and the size of these "neurulas" is near 1 mm <br/>
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<img src="/wiki/images/c/c7/409GFP-aid%2Bcontrol.jpg" alt="perdu" width="880px"/><br/>
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<center><img src="/wiki/images/d/d6/409zstackGFP.gif" alt="perdu"width="400px"/><br/></br>
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z-stack of the embryo<br/><br/></center>
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Some embryos express GFP-aid and some others do not, meaning that the injection did not work in some cases or the embryos do not express GFP-aid.<br>
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<h3>48h after injection</h3><br>
 
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Embryos are at <a href="https://2012.igem.org/Team:Evry/Stages">stage 34-38</a> and move by intermittence. The size of tadpole is near 2.5 mm<br>
 
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<img src="/wiki/images/f/f8/509_gfpaid_1et2.JPG" alt="perdu" width="880px" /><br>
 
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<img src="/wiki/images/c/c8/509_gfpaid_ctrl.JPG" alt="perdu" width="880px" /><br><br>
 
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The expression of GFP-aid is localized in different tissues for each embryo, in spite of the promoter being constitutive (CMV). We can think that the plasmid does not diffuse homogeneously in the embryos because of the vitellus viscosity. This question was  raised in one of the <a href="https://2012.igem.org/Team:Evry/plasmid_splitting">modelling part</a> <br/><br/>
 
 +
<br/><br/><br/>
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<h3>Three days after injection</h3><br/>
 
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Embryos are at <a href="https://2012.igem.org/Team:Evry/Stages">stage 41-42</a> and swim, the size of tadpole is near 4 mm.<br/><br/>
 
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From this tadpole stage an anaesthetic is required to take pictures of tadpoles, otherwise the light teases tadpoles, and it is difficult to take a good picture.
 
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<img src="/wiki/images/d/d0/GFPAID%2BpNHK60Zstack-1.gif" alt="perdu" width="400px" />
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<h2>Example of GFP expression in <i>Xenopus</i></h2><br/>
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<img src="/wiki/images/5/54/GFPAID-Zstack1-1.gif" alt="perdu" width="400px" /><br/><br/>
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z-stack pictures: pCS2+ CMV_GFP-aid, GFP expression is not observed in the same tissues between tadpoles: for example the embryo on the left picture expresses GFP in chevron-like structures in the tail (the somites), on the right picture the GFP expression is localized in the epidermis. The only part of the tadpole moving is the heart beating (between the head and the intestines)<br/><br/>
+
<p>The <a href="https://2012.igem.org/Team:Evry/InjectionTuto">injection tutorial</a> explains very simply with diagram how we did injection and how take care about your embryos and tadpole. The experiment carries on 5 days, from the unfertilized egg to a swimming tadpole at <a href="https://2012.igem.org/Team:Evry/Stages">stage</a> 48-50. The GFP (or other fluorescent protein) is expressed  few hours after the fertilization to the end of the week (see below).
-
<img src="/wiki/images/0/03/6.09_GFP-aid.JPG" alt="perdu" width="880px" />
+
<h3>Plasmid injected: pCS2+ with CMV promoter and GFP-aid reporter</h3><br/>
-
<img src="/wiki/images/8/81/6.09_control.JPG" alt="perdu" width="880px" /><br/><br/>
+
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The expression of GFP-aid is localized in different tissue for each tadpole, like the day before. GFP is present in same tissue, it means that the plasmid stays in the same cells.<br/><br/>
+
<p>pCS2+ GFP-aid: this plasmid contains the constitutive and ubiquitous promoter CMV and the aid sequenced of the aid system fusionned to GFP (Green Fluorescent Protein)(Nishimura et al., 2009), this Biobrick created by our team is <a href="http://partsregistry.org/wiki/index.php?title=Part:BBa_K812010">BBa_K812010</a>, and it was integrated into our Eucaryotic plasmid <a href="http://partsregistry.org/wiki/index.php?title=Part:BBa_K812000">BBa_K812000</a>.We injected about 3.78E+7 plasmids.</p><br/>
 +
 +
<img src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2012/c/cc/Tadpole_de_la_mort.png" alt="Image unavailable" width="950px" /> 
 +
</b></b>
 +
<p>
 +
GFP-aid expression from the embryo at <a href="https://2012.igem.org/Team:Evry/Stages">stage</a> 20 (one day after injection )to a tadpole at <a href="https://2012.igem.org/Team:Evry/Stages">stage</a> ~46 (four days after injection). For this tadpole the expression is localized in the skin.</b></b></b>
 +
</p>
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<h3>Four days after injection</h3><br/>
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We characterize the promoter CMV and elastase, not yet for the inducible promoter HSP70.
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Embryos are at <a href="https://2012.igem.org/Team:Evry/Stages">stage 45-46</a> and swim, the size of tadpole is near 5 mm.<br/><br/>
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Reporters characterized: sfGFP, mCitrine, mCFP and GFP-aid.<br><br>
 +
<h4><b>The characterization of all reporter and promoters is <u><a href="https://2012.igem.org/Team:Evry/Tadpole_injection1">here</a></u>.</b></h4><br>
 +
<h2>Conclusion</h2><br/>
-
<img src="/wiki/images/7/71/7.09_GFP-aid.JPG" alt="perdu" width="880px" />
+
<p>This new BioBricked plasmid is ready to use in <i>Xenopus tropicalis</i>. As you can see above the plasmid pCS2+ with the CMV pomoter express the fluorescent protein GFP-aid, but this plasmid carry on  important things to express a gene into eukaryotic calls. The 5'UTR region and the 3' UTR region was needed for  gene expression in euklaryotic organism. The simplest way to do that was to use a plasmid already used in eukaryotic cells, vertebrate and especially  <i>Xenopus tropicalis</i>  as pCS2+. This pCS2+ was Biobricked to be compatible with the registry. <br>
-
<img src="/wiki/images/f/f2/7.09_control.JPG" alt="perdu" width="880px" /><br/><br/>
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The GFP is still present in specific tissue, but also the GFP is decreasing. Plasmids could be ruined by cells, and/or the quantity of plasmids could decrease in each cells which involved the diminution of GFP in each cells, after that it is more difficult to see GFP.
+
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Pictures with the LSM 510 META Laser Scanning Microscope from Zeiss.<br/> A great  thank to Dr Daniel Stockholm and <a href="http://www.genethon.fr/en/">Genethon</a> for using this microscope.<br/><br/>
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The pCS2+ plasmid was characterized and different reporters were expressed under the control of different promoters: <a href="https://2012.igem.org/Team:Evry/Tadpole_injection1">here</a>.<br>
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<img src="/wiki/images/c/ce/Picture_genethon_GFP-aid_7.09.jpg" alt="perdu" width="880px" /><br/>
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The tadpole 1 expresses GFP-aid in epidermic cells, whereas the tadpole 2 expresses GFP-aid in optical nerve, olfactory nerve, tail muscle cells and branchial basket.<br/><br/><br/><br/>
+
-
</ol>
+
<p>
 +
Nevertheless we expected a more uniform expression of the reporters with the CMV promoter. Within tadpole, fluorescent proteins were observed in one to four different tissues, and tissues were different between tadpoles.
 +
</p>
 +
<p>
 +
Explanation: The plasmid DNA does not diffuse in the egg and stay in the same area around the injection site. This means that depending on the injection site, the plasmid will be inherited by a given set of cells within the tadpole. This question was raised in our <a href="https://2012.igem.org/Team:Evry/plasmid_splitting">model</a>. Another reason could be that the metabolism of each differentiated cell is different and changes during the tadpole's development.
 +
</p>
-
<h3><b>The characterization of all reporter and promoters is <u><a href="https://2012.igem.org/Team:Evry/Tadpole_injection1">here</a></u>.</b></h3><br/><br/>
+
<p>
 +
Our experiment showed us that plasmids injected do not diffuse in the whole organism. To express a protein with a promoter tissue specific it is a problem, because of the very low the probability to have the plasmid into the expected tissue. To solve the problem it is possible to easily integrate promoters and genes into the <i>Xenopus</i>'s  chromosome with the REMI technic [3]. A new plasmid pCS2+ with I-SceI sites upstream  the promoter and downstream of the reporter could allow the integration of the sequence between this two I-SceI restriction sites. This plasmid could be useful for the eukaryotic community, they could change promoters easily with SalI and HindIII and the reporter is compatible with the registry (with BB prefix and suffix), and they would have the choice to test a construction by plasmid injection or DNA chromosome integration.
 +
</p>
-
<h2>Conclusion</h2><br/>
+
<p>
 +
Moreover, the expression of reporters decreases during time, because plasmid DNA is subjected to a catabolic activity during development but also plasmid DNA gets diluted as cells proliferate and the quantity of plasmid DNA decreases for each cell. Integration into the chromosome could prevent it.
 +
</p>
-
We showed that our constructions express our reporters with the CMV promoter. These parts are considered characterized. Nevertheless we expected a more uniform expression of the reporters with the CMV promoter. Spectral variants of fluorescent proteins could be expressed in different tissues. Within one tadpole the fluorescent proteins were observed in one to four different tissues, and tissues were different between tadpoles. <br/>
+
<p>
-
Explanation: The plasmid DNA does not diffuse in the egg and stay in the same area around the injection site. This means that depending on the injection site, the plasmid will be inherited by a given set of cells within the tadpole. This question was raised in our <a href="https://2012.igem.org/Team:Evry/plasmid_splitting">model</a>. An other reason could be that the metabolism of each tissue specific cell is different and change during the tadpole's development.<br/>  
+
Our project raised important ethics question because the team use tadpole, an animal. We reflect that working with tadpole involved new questions about the animal pain but also about using animals in iGEM and in Synthetic Biology. It made us think about these questions, our reflection is in <a href="https://2012.igem.org/Team:Evry/HumanPractice">Human Practice</a>.</p><br>
-
Moreover the expression of reporters decreases during time, because plasmid DNA is subjected to a catabolic activity during development but also plasmid DNA gets diluted as cells proliferate and the quantity of plasmid DNA decreases for each cell.<br/><br/>
+
-
+
<div id="citation_box">
<div id="citation_box">
<p id="references">References:</p>
<p id="references">References:</p>
<ol>
<ol>
-
<li><i>Inducible control of tissue-specific transgene expression in Xenopus tropicalis transgenic lines.</i>, Chae J., Zimmerman L.B., Grainger R.M., Mechanisms of development 117:1-2, 2002</li>
+
<li><i>Inducible control of tissue-specific transgene expression in <i>Xenopus</i> tropicalis transgenic lines.</i>, Chae J., Zimmerman L.B., Grainger R.M., Mechanisms of development 117:1-2, 2002</li>
<li><i>Xenopus: a prince among models for pronephric kidney development.</i>, Jones E., JASN 16:2, 2005</li>
<li><i>Xenopus: a prince among models for pronephric kidney development.</i>, Jones E., JASN 16:2, 2005</li>
-
<li><i>An auxin-based degron system for the rapid depletion of proteins in nonplant cells</i>, Nishimura K., Fukagawa T., Takisawa H., Kakimoto T., Kanemaki M., Nature Methods 6:12, 2009</li>
+
<li><i>REMI (Restriction Enzyme Mediated Integration) and its Impact on the Isolation of Pathogenicity Genes in Fungi Attacking Plants</li> Kahmann R., Basse C., European Journal of Plant Pathology</li>
</ol>
</ol>
</div>
</div>

Latest revision as of 01:22, 27 September 2012

Xenopus tropicalis: A new multicellular chassis

Establishment of a new chassis


So far, synthetic biology has mostly focused on bacteria, since they are simple to engineer. iGEM teams and laboratories have met synthetic biology laboratories on unicellular organisms in order to understand the underlying biology and have developed an impressive database of molecular parts. Some work has also been done on engineering mammalian cells and a few iGEM teams have followed this trend. Synthetic biologists are now imagining the rational design of multicellular organisms with numerous applications ranging from gene therapy or drug production to environmental monitoring. This year, our team would like to be part of that challenge.

The arrival of Xenopus as a chassis in synthetic biology requires the creation of new standards and protocols that the community will be able to build on. We provided the registry with such tools that allow rapid construction and characterization of devices in vivo, and include debugging tools. We think they will be very useful for later iGEM teams and synthetic biologists who wish to work with Xenopus for building multicellular systems.

A multi-tissular systems allows testing protein effect into an animal. The expression/degradation of a protein (a protein fused to GFP in example) can be followed in the organism. Xenopus can be used as a biosensor, Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) plan to validate an assay capable of detecting thyroid disruptor using Xenopus. With our plasmid it is easy to test in 5 days a promoter or/and a reporter in the new chassis xenopus because it contains a working immune/vascular/neurologic/nephrologic/digestive systems.

This year, the Evry iGEM team is going to be the one of the first iGEM team to work on a vertebrate. Our work is focused both on developing a system for intercellular and intertissue communication, and creating the tools for the iGEM community to easily express genes in specific tissues. We believe the tadpole is a chassis of choice for iGEM on multicellular organisms, as experiments can be conducted in one week using microinjection methods. We hope to demonstrate the feasibility of engineering Xenopus in one summer for an iGEM project, and to create a great tool for multicellular synthetic biology: An orthogonal hormonal system.


The simple molecular strategy to build eukaryotic plasmid ready to use:


Xenopus tropicalis represents a challenge as it is a vertebrate but also because it's a new chassis in the iGEM competition. To make sure we meet iGEM’s expectations on time, we have had to develop a new biobrick plasmid backbone compatible with Xenopus tropicalis (but also others vertebrate and fish). The plasmid is produced in bacteria then purified and injected into Xenopus's eggs. The plasmid can not replicate in eukaryotic cells. As origins of replication are cryptic in Xenopus, the plasmid does not replicate. Therefore, it is only active in the first two or three weeks of development, as the injected plasmid is passed on randomly to daughter cells. After that, it becomes too diluted.

Image unavailable
  • Kozac : The Kozak consensus sequence is essential for the initiation of the translation process in eukaryotes. The sequence is the following (gcc)gccRccAUGG, where upper case letters are highly-conserved bases, and lower case letter can vary

  • Promoter : The promoter of a gene is located upstream of this gene and initiate its transcription. The promoter is surrounded by the enzyme restriction sites SalI and HindIII in order to be able to switch more easily to other promoters

  • 5'UTR and 3’UTR : UTRs are Untranslated Region. The B-globin 5' UTR is located upstream of the coding sequence and is involved in 5'RNA capping. The 3'UTR is located downstream of the coding sequence and may contain sequences for the regulation of translation efficiency, mRNA stability, and polyadenylation signals

  • SV40 PolyA signal : The simian virus 40 polyadenylation signal is involved in the maturation of the mRNA for translation and is composed of a succession of adenine bases

  • Antibiotic resistance genes : This sequence is necessary for the selection of transformed bacteria exposed to the antibiotic

  • Biobrick prefix and suffix

  • Origin of replication : This origin of replication is bacterial, this sequence initiates the replication of DNA

  • By putting all the parts necessary for expression in eukaryotes, we have made plasmids where any coding biobrick (containing Kozak sequence) can be cloned in directly without having to transfer each parts individually. These plasmids can be used to rapidly test genetic constructions in Xenopus tropicalis after a single cloning.
    It is possible to easily change promoter with the restriction sites SalI and HindIII.
    The plasmid also contains tools to calibrate the system in combination with a model. For instance, it contains sites for in vitro transcription (sp6 sites) of genes to make RNA that can then be injected directly in the embryo, allowing a much finer control of the ratio between levels of different genes during construct testing.

    To test it, inject 2.3 nL of 100 ng.uL-1 plasmid solution into the one cell embryo following the injecting tutorial.For a plasmid of 4kb it represents approximately 45 million of plasmids per injection. As the cell divides, plasmids are shared between cells but not replicated so a high concentration of DNA is necessary to ensure there will be DNA in most of the organism. Once the transcription machinery turns on during the development, plasmids are transcribed and translated. Since the tadpole stage starts after a few days, we can work on a whole vertebrate with most organs formed within a week. With different tissues it is possible to diversify the type of expression with different promoters.

    So far we have made 3 new plasmid backbones with different promoters :

  • With a CMV promoter for an ubiquitous expression : (BBa_K812000),
  • With a Hsp70 promoter for an inducible expression : (BBa_K812300),
  • With a Elastase promoter for a tissue specific expression : (BBa_K812200).


  • Our goal was to provide tools which would allow to rapidly build and characterize constructs in the embryos (along with a synthetic hormone to make them communicate), with tools for debugging (by injecting mRNA) and with ubiquitous, inducible and tissue specific promoters.



Example of GFP expression in Xenopus


The injection tutorial explains very simply with diagram how we did injection and how take care about your embryos and tadpole. The experiment carries on 5 days, from the unfertilized egg to a swimming tadpole at stage 48-50. The GFP (or other fluorescent protein) is expressed few hours after the fertilization to the end of the week (see below).

Plasmid injected: pCS2+ with CMV promoter and GFP-aid reporter


pCS2+ GFP-aid: this plasmid contains the constitutive and ubiquitous promoter CMV and the aid sequenced of the aid system fusionned to GFP (Green Fluorescent Protein)(Nishimura et al., 2009), this Biobrick created by our team is BBa_K812010, and it was integrated into our Eucaryotic plasmid BBa_K812000.We injected about 3.78E+7 plasmids.


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GFP-aid expression from the embryo at stage 20 (one day after injection )to a tadpole at stage ~46 (four days after injection). For this tadpole the expression is localized in the skin.

We characterize the promoter CMV and elastase, not yet for the inducible promoter HSP70. Reporters characterized: sfGFP, mCitrine, mCFP and GFP-aid.

The characterization of all reporter and promoters is here.


Conclusion


This new BioBricked plasmid is ready to use in Xenopus tropicalis. As you can see above the plasmid pCS2+ with the CMV pomoter express the fluorescent protein GFP-aid, but this plasmid carry on important things to express a gene into eukaryotic calls. The 5'UTR region and the 3' UTR region was needed for gene expression in euklaryotic organism. The simplest way to do that was to use a plasmid already used in eukaryotic cells, vertebrate and especially Xenopus tropicalis as pCS2+. This pCS2+ was Biobricked to be compatible with the registry.
The pCS2+ plasmid was characterized and different reporters were expressed under the control of different promoters: here.

Nevertheless we expected a more uniform expression of the reporters with the CMV promoter. Within tadpole, fluorescent proteins were observed in one to four different tissues, and tissues were different between tadpoles.

Explanation: The plasmid DNA does not diffuse in the egg and stay in the same area around the injection site. This means that depending on the injection site, the plasmid will be inherited by a given set of cells within the tadpole. This question was raised in our model. Another reason could be that the metabolism of each differentiated cell is different and changes during the tadpole's development.

Our experiment showed us that plasmids injected do not diffuse in the whole organism. To express a protein with a promoter tissue specific it is a problem, because of the very low the probability to have the plasmid into the expected tissue. To solve the problem it is possible to easily integrate promoters and genes into the Xenopus's chromosome with the REMI technic [3]. A new plasmid pCS2+ with I-SceI sites upstream the promoter and downstream of the reporter could allow the integration of the sequence between this two I-SceI restriction sites. This plasmid could be useful for the eukaryotic community, they could change promoters easily with SalI and HindIII and the reporter is compatible with the registry (with BB prefix and suffix), and they would have the choice to test a construction by plasmid injection or DNA chromosome integration.

Moreover, the expression of reporters decreases during time, because plasmid DNA is subjected to a catabolic activity during development but also plasmid DNA gets diluted as cells proliferate and the quantity of plasmid DNA decreases for each cell. Integration into the chromosome could prevent it.

Our project raised important ethics question because the team use tadpole, an animal. We reflect that working with tadpole involved new questions about the animal pain but also about using animals in iGEM and in Synthetic Biology. It made us think about these questions, our reflection is in Human Practice.


References:

  1. Inducible control of tissue-specific transgene expression in Xenopus tropicalis transgenic lines., Chae J., Zimmerman L.B., Grainger R.M., Mechanisms of development 117:1-2, 2002
  2. Xenopus: a prince among models for pronephric kidney development., Jones E., JASN 16:2, 2005
  3. REMI (Restriction Enzyme Mediated Integration) and its Impact on the Isolation of Pathogenicity Genes in Fungi Attacking Plants
  4. Kahmann R., Basse C., European Journal of Plant Pathology