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<p2>Sodium sulfite is known as an oxygen scavenger. This is because it reacts with oxygen and removed it from the solution. It has a minimal effect on cell growth and does not diminish fluorescence of GFP suggesting it does not fully draw oxygen out of cells when they are in a shaking incubator or on an agar plate. | <p2>Sodium sulfite is known as an oxygen scavenger. This is because it reacts with oxygen and removed it from the solution. It has a minimal effect on cell growth and does not diminish fluorescence of GFP suggesting it does not fully draw oxygen out of cells when they are in a shaking incubator or on an agar plate. | ||
Supposed Electrochemical Module Mechanism: | Supposed Electrochemical Module Mechanism: | ||
+ | Sulfite removes oxygen from solution allowing pyocyanin to be maintained in a reduced state. A potential of +0.5V generates oxidised pyocyanin and ferricyanide. Ferricyanide pushes the cell into an oxidising condition, allowing pyocyanin to remain oxidised and activate gene expression of a redox sensing gene circuit. A -0.3V potential generated reduced pyocyanin and ferrocyanide. Ferrocyanide pushes the cell into a reducing condition, allowing pyocyanin to remain reduced to prevent activation of gene expression by a redox sensing gene circuit. | ||
+ | |||
</p2> | </p2> | ||
</div> | </div> | ||
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<div class="drop"> | <div class="drop"> | ||
<h4>SoxR:</h4> | <h4>SoxR:</h4> | ||
− | <p2>SoxR is a transcription factor which is constitutively expressed from the pSoxR portion of the pSoxR/pSoxS bidirectional promoter. Upon oxidation by a redox-cycling drug (such as pyocyanin) SoxR is able to activate gene transcription downstream of the pSoxS | + | <p2>SoxR is a transcription factor which is constitutively expressed from the pSoxR portion of the pSoxR/pSoxS bidirectional promoter. Upon oxidation by a redox-cycling drug (such as pyocyanin), SoxR is able to activate gene transcription downstream of the pSoxS region of the bidirectional promoter. The PixCell library contains a series of SoxR transcription factors with different activities which can be assembled modularly.</p2> |
− | <h4> | + | <h4><i>p</i>SoxS:</h4> |
− | <p2> | + | <p2><i>p</i>SoxS forms one half of the pSoxR/pSoxS bidirectional promoter. It is constitutively inactive, being activated by oxidised SoxR. The PixCell library includes engineered, unidirectional pSoxS promoters with variable activity which can be assembled modularly.</p2> |
<h4>Quinone Pool:</h4> | <h4>Quinone Pool:</h4> | ||
<p2>Quinones are molecules found in respiratory membranes which shuttle electrons across the electron transport chain. Ferricyanide has been known to oxidise the quinone pool, drawing electrons out of a cell to amplify the response of pyocyanin. The full mechanism of this pathway is currently unknown. | <p2>Quinones are molecules found in respiratory membranes which shuttle electrons across the electron transport chain. Ferricyanide has been known to oxidise the quinone pool, drawing electrons out of a cell to amplify the response of pyocyanin. The full mechanism of this pathway is currently unknown. | ||
</p2> | </p2> | ||
− | + | ||
− | + | ||
+ | <h4>Biological Module Mechanism:</h4> | ||
+ | When the Iron-Sulfur centres of SoxR are oxidised by oxidised pyocyanin produced by the electrochemical module, it activates transcription downstream of pSoxS. This allows for electrogenetic induction of any gene or gene circuit downstream of this promoter. | ||
+ | </div> | ||
<h3 id="pixcell">PixCell Electrogenetic System Design</h3> | <h3 id="pixcell">PixCell Electrogenetic System Design</h3> | ||
Revision as of 06:07, 17 October 2018