Difference between revisions of "Team:Toulouse-INSA-UPS"

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<p class="sponsor">The all "Toulouse INSA-UPS" wants to thanks our sponsors, especially:</p>
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<p class="sponsor">And many more. For futher informations about our sponsors please consult <b><u><a href="https://2018.igem.org/Team:Toulouse-INSA-UPS/Sponsors" class="footer">our Sponsors page</a></u></b>.</p>
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<p>The content provided on this website is the fruit of the work of the "Toulouse INSA-UPS" iGEM Team. As a deliverable for the iGEM Competition, it falls under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0. Thus, all content on this wiki is available under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 license (or any later version). For futher informations, please consult the  official website of Creative Commons.</p>
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<p>This website was designed with Bootstrap (4.1.3). Bootstrap is a front-end library of component for html, css and javascript. It relies on both Popper and jQuery. For futher informations, please consult the official website of Bootstrap.</p>
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<h1 id="Cerbrus Project" class="heavy">Cerberus Project</h1>
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<img style="float:left; margin-right:5px; margin-bottom:2px;" width="150px" height="140px" src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2018/thumb/f/fb/T--Toulouse-INSA-UPS--All--Yohann--TeamLogo.png/613px-T--Toulouse-INSA-UPS--All--Yohann--TeamLogo.png" alt="Cerberus logo" />
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<p style="text-indent: 25px;"><b>Cellulose</b> is the most common organic molecule on earth and is widely used in the textile industry. We at <b>iGEM Toulouse-INSA-UPS 2018</b> are convinced that functionalising cellulose paves the way towards a whole range of exciting possibilities. From conductive paper to anti-infection tissues, applications domains are aplenty (medicine, textile, stationery, etc). The major bottleneck is the complexity to conjugate bioactive molecules to cellulose.<p>
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<p style="text-indent: 25px;">To circumvent this limitation and enable a wide range of chemicals to be fixated to cellulose, we designed a <b>three headed linker protein named Cerberus</b> (in reference to the mythological dog). Cerberus is based on the fusion of three fixating protein structures representing the three heads of the system. The first head is a protein domain of the type 3 Carbohydrates Binding Modules (CBM3) family to bind cellulose. The second is one of the strongest linkage systems of the living realm, streptavidin, with its high affinity for biotinylated compounds. The last of the heads features a non-natural amino acid, azidophenylalanine, catalysing covalent bonds by click chemistry. The versatility of our thought-out linker will allow a large variety of organic and inorganic molecules to conjugate with cellulose. During our summer, we will produce the linker and prove its large functionality by creating fluorescent, magnetic, antibiotic or even conductive cellulose in vivo using biotechnology strategies.</p>
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Revision as of 10:44, 28 September 2018

Cerberus Project


Cerberus logo

Cellulose is the most common organic molecule on earth and is widely used in the textile industry. We at iGEM Toulouse-INSA-UPS 2018 are convinced that functionalising cellulose paves the way towards a whole range of exciting possibilities. From conductive paper to anti-infection tissues, applications domains are aplenty (medicine, textile, stationery, etc). The major bottleneck is the complexity to conjugate bioactive molecules to cellulose.

To circumvent this limitation and enable a wide range of chemicals to be fixated to cellulose, we designed a three headed linker protein named Cerberus (in reference to the mythological dog). Cerberus is based on the fusion of three fixating protein structures representing the three heads of the system. The first head is a protein domain of the type 3 Carbohydrates Binding Modules (CBM3) family to bind cellulose. The second is one of the strongest linkage systems of the living realm, streptavidin, with its high affinity for biotinylated compounds. The last of the heads features a non-natural amino acid, azidophenylalanine, catalysing covalent bonds by click chemistry. The versatility of our thought-out linker will allow a large variety of organic and inorganic molecules to conjugate with cellulose. During our summer, we will produce the linker and prove its large functionality by creating fluorescent, magnetic, antibiotic or even conductive cellulose in vivo using biotechnology strategies.