Difference between revisions of "Team:UI Indonesia/Parts"

 
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       <ul class="nav navbar-nav navbar-right">
 
       <ul class="nav navbar-nav navbar-right">
 
         <li class="dropdown navbar-project">
 
         <li class="dropdown navbar-project">
           <a href="https://2018.igem.org/Team:UI_Indonesia/Project#">Project<span class="caret"></span></a>
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           <a href="https://2018.igem.org/Team:UI_Indonesia/Project">Project<span class="caret"></span></a>
 
           <ul class="dropdown-menu">
 
           <ul class="dropdown-menu">
 
             <li><a href="https://2018.igem.org/Team:UI_Indonesia/Project#">Overview</a></li>
 
             <li><a href="https://2018.igem.org/Team:UI_Indonesia/Project#">Overview</a></li>
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           </ul>
 
           </ul>
 
         </li>
 
         </li>
         <li class="navbar-parts"><a href="https://2018.igem.org/Team:UI_Indonesia/Parts">Parts</a></li>
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         <li class="navbar-parts current"><a href="https://2018.igem.org/Team:UI_Indonesia/Parts">Parts</a></li>
 
     <li class="navbar-safety"><a href="https://2018.igem.org/Team:UI_Indonesia/Safety">Safety</a></li>
 
     <li class="navbar-safety"><a href="https://2018.igem.org/Team:UI_Indonesia/Safety">Safety</a></li>
 
     <li class="dropdown navbar-interlab">
 
     <li class="dropdown navbar-interlab">
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     <li class="navbar-model"><a href="https://2018.igem.org/Team:UI_Indonesia/Model">Model</a></li>
 
     <li class="navbar-model"><a href="https://2018.igem.org/Team:UI_Indonesia/Model">Model</a></li>
 
     <li class="dropdown navbar-humanpractice">
 
     <li class="dropdown navbar-humanpractice">
           <a href="https://2018.igem.org/Team:UI_Indonesia/HumanPractices">Human Practices<span class="caret"></span></a>
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           <a href="https://2018.igem.org/Team:UI_Indonesia/Human_Practices">Human Practices<span class="caret"></span></a>
 
           <ul class="dropdown-menu">
 
           <ul class="dropdown-menu">
 
             <li><a href="https://2018.igem.org/Team:UI_Indonesia/Human_Practices">Integrated Human Practice</a></li>
 
             <li><a href="https://2018.igem.org/Team:UI_Indonesia/Human_Practices">Integrated Human Practice</a></li>
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   </div>
 
   </div>
 
</nav>
 
</nav>
<!-- First Parallax Image with Logo Text -->
+
 
<div class="bgimg-1 w3-display-container">
+
<!-- Container (Affitoxin Section) -->
  <div class="make-it-rain w3-display-container">
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<div class="bgimg-3 w3-display-container w3-opacity-min" id="affitoxin">
   <div class="w3-display-middle">
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   <div class="w3-display-middle" style="white-space:nowrap;">
     <span class="w3-xxlarge w3-text-white w3-wide"></span>
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     <span class="w3-center w3-padding-large w3-black w3-xlarge w3-wide w3-animate-opacity">DIPHTOX</span>
 
   </div>
 
   </div>
</div>
 
 
</div>
 
</div>
  
<!-- Container (About Section) -->
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<div class="w3-content w3-container w3-padding-64">
<div class="w3-content w3-container w3-padding-64" id="about">
+
   <h5>Using the <i>wild-type</i> diphtheria exotoxin to characterize HB-EGF/Tar receptor could be harmful due to biosafety reason. To tackle this problem, our team design a much simplified diphtheria toxin by removing the domain that is deadly to the cell. This domain, named domain C, will be translocated into the cell with the aid of other domains in toxin called domain R and domain T. Additionally, R domain recognized the natural HBEGF receptor, and T domain will insert the C domain into the cell. Thus, C domain would catalyze NAD-dependent ADP-ribosylation of EF-2 and leads to cellular apoptosis<sup>1</sup>. This remodeled toxin, coined DiphTox, is incorporated in the plasmids (such as pSB1C3 and pEQ80L) along with the following parts.</h5><br>
   <h5><b>Diphtheria</b> is an infection caused by pathogenic bacterium <i>Corynebacterium diphtheriae</i>. The hallmark of diphtheria infection is pseudomembrane formation in posterior pharynx, potentially leading to respiratory tract obstruction and death. In addition, the bacterium produces toxin that enters cell via interaction with heparin-binding EGF-like growth factor (HB-EGF) receptor and inhibits protein synthesis, resulting in lethal complications such as myocarditis, bleeding problem, kidney and liver necrosis.</h5>
+
<h5>Despite being preventable and curable, incidence and mortality rate caused by diphtheria are still increasing, especially in developing countries including Indonesia. Recently, there has been diphtheria outbreak affecting major provinces in Indonesia, mainly in unvaccinated children and adults. Therefore, there are two issues to be highlighted: (1) lack of early detection and prompt treatment of diphtheria infection and (2) lack of awareness regarding diphtheria and vaccination among Indonesian people.</h5>
+
  
   <div class="w3-row-padding w3-center">
+
   <div class="w3-row w3-center">
     <button class="w3-button w3-padding-large w3-light-green" onclick="location.href = 'https://2018.igem.org/Team:UI_Indonesia/Project';" style="margin-top:64px">SEE MORE</button>
+
     <img src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2018/5/54/T--UI_Indonesia--partsf1diphtox.png" class="w3-image" width="500">
 +
  <h6><b>Figure 1.</b> DiphTox Biobrick.</h6></div><br>
 +
 
 +
  <h5>Amplification of single biobrick are done via PCR cloning using ‘self-made’ universal forward (Primer Cloning Fwd) and reverse primers (Primer Cloning Rev). The following sequences are the primers for PCR cloning.</h5>
 +
  <br>
 +
  <div class="w3-row w3-center">
 +
    <table>
 +
      <tr>
 +
        <th>Primers</th>
 +
        <th>Sequence</th>
 +
        <th>Melting Temperatures (Tm)</th>
 +
        <th>GC Content (%)</th>
 +
        <th>Hairpin Structure Energy Formation (kcal/mol)</th>
 +
        <th>Self-dimer Energy Formation (kcal/mol)</th>
 +
      </tr>
 +
      <tr>
 +
        <td>Fwd Cloning</td>
 +
        <td>5’ AGTTCAAGTGTCCGAGAA 3’</td>
 +
        <td>60.2<sup>0</sup>C</td>
 +
        <td>44.4%</td>
 +
        <td>0.64</td>
 +
        <td>-3.61</td>
 +
      </tr>
 +
      <tr>
 +
        <td>Rev Cloning</td>
 +
        <td>5’ TAAGCGAGTGCCGTATTA 3’</td>
 +
        <td>60.1<sup>0</sup>C</td>
 +
        <td>44.4%</td>
 +
        <td>-1.36</td>
 +
        <td>-3.61</td>
 +
      </tr>
 +
    </table>
 +
    <h6><b>Table 1.</b> PCR Cloning Amplification Primers</h6>
 
   </div>
 
   </div>
 +
  <br>
 +
  <h5>Note: Both heterodimer energy formations are -3.61 kcal/mol. Additionally, the predicted specifications are based on <i>IDT Oligo Analyzer 3.1</i> <a href="https://sg.idtdna.com/calc/analyzer" style="color:blue">server.</a> PCR solution is predicted to contain 0.2 mM dNTP, 50 mM Na<sup>+</sup>, 5 mM Mg<sup>2+</sup>, and 0.3 mM oligos.
 +
  </h5><br>
 +
 +
  <h5>Confirmation of gBlocks insertion into plasmid could be confirmed using PCR colony method using following primer. Note that HbT1 Fwd and HbT2 Rev is the same primer used in HT fragments to do in DipthTox gBlocks.</h5>
 +
  <br>
 +
  <div class="w3-row w3-center">
 +
    <table>
 +
      <tr>
 +
        <th>Primers</th>
 +
        <th>Sequence</th>
 +
        <th>Melting Temperatures (Tm)</th>
 +
        <th>GC Content (%)</th>
 +
        <th>Hairpin Structure Energy Formation (kcal/mol)</th>
 +
        <th>Self-dimer Energy Formation (kcal/mol)</th>
 +
      </tr>
 +
      <tr>
 +
        <td>HbT1 Fwd</td>
 +
        <td>5’ CTTACGCTTCTGCCACAT 3’</td>
 +
        <td>61.7<sup>0</sup>C</td>
 +
        <td>50%</td>
 +
        <td>-0.84</td>
 +
        <td>-3.61</td>
 +
      </tr>
 +
      <tr>
 +
        <td>HbT2 Rev</td>
 +
        <td>5’ CCCCTGACTGAGCATGAT 3’</td>
 +
        <td>62.8<sup>0</sup>C</td>
 +
        <td>55.6%</td>
 +
        <td>0.57</td>
 +
        <td>-5.38</td>
 +
      </tr>
 +
    </table>
 +
    <h6><b>Table 2.</b> Detailed data for DiphTox PCR colony primers</h6><br>
 +
  </div>
 +
  <br>
 +
  <h5>Note: Both heterodimer energy formation exhibits -5.04 kcal/mol free energy.</h5><br>
 +
 +
  <h5>For iGEM biobrick submission, we would use prefix and suffix that contain EcoRI and PstI. Further characterization of the biobrick of DiphTox could be accessed via <a href="http://parts.igem.org/Part:BBa_K2607000" style="color:blue">http://parts.igem.org/Part:BBa_K2607000</a>. HindIII site and BamHI are inserted upstream from prefix and downstream from suffix respectively. The DiphTox contains only the last 54 amino acid from the R domain which has no cytotoxicity and significant enough to bind with HBEGF receptor<sup>2</sup>. At the downstream of the sequence, designing six histidine amino acids is essential for His-tag protein purification, as well as characterizing the DiphTox and HB-EGF/Tar receptor kinetics. Ribosome Binding Site (RBS) is located upstream within the gBlocks containing Shine-Dalgarno sequence as follow.<br>
 +
  RBS : 5' GAGCGGATTATATAAGGAGGTTAATC 3’
 +
  </h5><br>
 
</div>
 
</div>
  
<!-- Team -->
+
<!-- Container (HB-EGF/Tar Section) -->
<div class="bgimg-2 w3-display-container">
+
<div class="bgimg-3 w3-display-container w3-opacity-min" id="hbegftar">
   <div class="w3-display-middle">
+
   <div class="w3-display-middle" style="white-space:nowrap;">
     <span class="w3-xxlarge w3-text-white w3-wide"></span>
+
     <span class="w3-center w3-padding-large w3-black w3-xlarge w3-wide w3-animate-opacity">HB-EGF/Tar</span>
 
   </div>
 
   </div>
 
</div>
 
</div>
  
<!-- Container (Team Section) -->
+
<div class="w3-content w3-container w3-padding-64">
<div class="w3-content w3-container w3-padding-64" id="team">
+
   <h5>HB-EGF/Tar is a synthetically combined receptor used as project’s diagnostic tool system. Since there was limitation in its biobrick construction (for its high DNA complexity and base pairs length as <i>gBlocks</i>), we separate the HB-EGF/Tar sequence into two fragments called HB-EGF/Tar Fragment 1 (HT-1) in the upstream, and the other one would be HB-EGF/Tar Fragment 2 (HT-2). The schematic structure of HT-1 biobrick is as follow.</h5><br>
   <h5>We, fourteen undergraduate students from various backgrounds in iGEM University of Indonesia (UI) 2018 team, are collaborating in attempt to overcome these problems. We plan to develop an alternative method for detecting diphtheria toxin by integrating native <i>Escherichia coli</i> chemotaxis system with heparin-binding EGF-like growth factor (HB-EGF) receptor and fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) system, comprising of LuxAB and enhanced yellow fluorescence protein (eYFP). Furthermore, we plan to raise awareness regarding diphtheria and vaccination among people around us by means of charities and social works. For further information about our project, human practices, collaboration with other iGEM teams, and many others, feel free to navigate our Wiki pages.</h5>
+
  
   <div class="w3-row-padding w3-center">
+
   <div class="w3-row w3-center">
     <button class="w3-button w3-padding-large w3-light-green" onclick="location.href = 'https://2018.igem.org/Team:UI_Indonesia/Team';" style="margin-top:64px">SEE MORE</button>
+
     <img src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2018/c/c3/T--UI_Indonesia--partsf2.png" class="w3-image" width="500">
 +
  <h6><b>Figure 2.</b> HB-EGF/Tar Fragment 1 Biobrick.</h6></div><br>
 +
 
 +
  <h5>The HT-1 fragment consist of 981 bp sequence that include <i>SalI</i> cutting site and specified PCR colony reverse primer (HbT1 rev). Amplification of single biobrick are done via PCR cloning using ‘self-made’ universal forward (Primer Cloning Fwd) and reverse primers (Primer Cloning Rev), which are the same as cloning primer for DiphTox gBlocks.</h5><br>
 +
 
 +
  <h5>For confirmation of this biobrick existence inside <i>E. coli</i>, PCR colony is essential, using specific primers named “PCR colony HbT1 fwd” for forward primer and “PCR colony HbT1 rev” for reverse primer. They are constructed using NCBI primer BLAST <a href="https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/tools/primer-blast/" style="color:blue">website.</a> The sequences are served as follows.</h5>
 +
  <br>
 +
  <div class="w3-row w3-center">
 +
    <table>
 +
      <tr>
 +
        <th>Primers</th>
 +
        <th>Sequence</th>
 +
        <th>Melting Temperatures (Tm)</th>
 +
        <th>GC Content (%)</th>
 +
        <th>Hairpin Structure Energy Formation (kcal/mol)</th>
 +
        <th>Self-dimer Energy Formation (kcal/mol)</th>
 +
      </tr>
 +
      <tr>
 +
        <td>HbT1 Fwd</td>
 +
        <td>5’ CTTACGCTTCTGCCACAT 3’</td>
 +
        <td>61.7<sup>0</sup>C</td>
 +
        <td>50%</td>
 +
        <td>-0.84</td>
 +
        <td>-3.61</td>
 +
      </tr>
 +
      <tr>
 +
        <td>HbT1 Rev</td>
 +
        <td>5’ TTCTTACGCTTCCCATGTTC 3’</td>
 +
        <td>62.1<sup>0</sup>C</td>
 +
        <td>45%</td>
 +
        <td>0.64</td>
 +
        <td>-5.38</td>
 +
      </tr>
 +
    </table>
 +
    <h6><b>Table 3.</b> Detailed data for HT1 PCR colony primers</h6><br>
 
   </div>
 
   </div>
 +
  <br>
 +
  <h5>Note: Both heterodimer energy formations are -4.77 kcal/mol.</h5><br>
 +
 +
  <h5>Biobrick RFC10 prefix is necessary and would be cut using EcoRI enzyme for submission. Active gene transcription includes highly expressing T7 constitutive promoter (Bba_I712074) located in the upstream part of HT-1. Ribosomal binding site (RBS) (Bba_B0034) functions to initiate direct HB-EGF/Tar translation (HbTf1-RBS). It is 18 bp in length with the following sequence, 5' AAAGAGGAGAAATACTAG 3’, conformed with Shine-Dalgarno sequence
 +
  <br>
 +
  The next fragment of HB-EGF/Tar Sequence, called HB-EGF/Tar Fragment 2 (HT-2), will be ligated exactly next to the first one via SalI restriction site. Schematic representation of HB-EGF/Tar Fragment 2 is as follow.</h5><br>
 +
 +
  <div class="w3-row w3-center">
 +
    <img src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2018/0/04/T--UI_Indonesia--partsf3.png" class="w3-image" width="500">
 +
  <h6><b>Figure 3.</b> HB-EGF/Tar Fragment 2 Biobrick.</h6></div><br>
 +
 +
  <h5>To amplify this part, we would use universal PCR cloning forward and reverse primers with their sequences same as HT-1 and DiphTox gBlocks. PCR colony, with a specific primer named “HbT2 fwd” for forward primer and “HbT2 Rev” for reverse primer, could be used to confirm any successful transformation of ligated insert. Both primers are constructed with NCBI primer BLAST website and have the sequence detailed below.</h5>
 +
  <br>
 +
  <div class="w3-row w3-center">
 +
    <table>
 +
      <tr>
 +
        <th>Primers</th>
 +
        <th>Sequence</th>
 +
        <th>Melting Temperatures (Tm)</th>
 +
        <th>GC Content (%)</th>
 +
        <th>Hairpin Structure Energy Formation (kcal/mol)</th>
 +
        <th>Self-dimer Energy Formation (kcal/mol)</th>
 +
      </tr>
 +
      <tr>
 +
        <td>HbT2 Fwd</td>
 +
        <td>5’ GTTAGCGGTCTCAGAAATGG 3’</td>
 +
        <td>62.2<sup>0</sup>C</td>
 +
        <td>50%</td>
 +
        <td>-1.15</td>
 +
        <td>-3.61</td>
 +
      </tr>
 +
      <tr>
 +
        <td>HbT2 Rev</td>
 +
        <td>5’ CCCCTGACTGAGCATGAT 3’</td>
 +
        <td>62.8<sup>0</sup>C</td>
 +
        <td>55.6%</td>
 +
        <td>0.57</td>
 +
        <td>-5.38</td>
 +
      </tr>
 +
    </table>
 +
    <h6><b>Table 4.</b> detailed data for HT2 PCR colony primers</h6><br>
 +
  </div>
 +
  <br>
 +
  <h5>Note: Both heterodimer energy formations are -6.73 kcal/mol.</h5><br>
 +
 
 +
  <h5>In this fragment, SalI and NdeI are in upstream and downstream respectively. This arrangement would enable that HB-EGF/Tar frag 1 and HB-EGF/Tar frag 2 be next to each other and transcribed as a unity. At the end part of the coding region we add double terminator rrnB T1 and T7TE terminator (Bba_B0015). These terminators have been known to effectively terminate transcription of any gene. We shall submit the overall HB-EGF/Tar biobrick sequence by inserting iGEM registered RFC10 suffix that contain PstI restriction site at the downstream of the coding region. The prefix, as mentioned earlier, is inserted in the first fragment of the HB-EGF/Tar sequence. Further characterization of the biobrick of complete HB-EGF/Tar synthetic gene could be accessed via Further characterization of the biobrick of DiphTox could be accessed via <a href="http://parts.igem.org/Part:BBa_K2607001" style="color:blue">http://parts.igem.org/Part:BBa_K2607001</a>.
 +
  </h5><br>
 +
 +
  <h5><b>Reference</b>
 +
    <ol class="ref">
 +
      <li>Gillet D, Barbier J. Diphtheria toxin. The Comprehensive Sourcebook of Bacterial Protein Toxins. 2015;:111-132.</li>
 +
      <li>2.  Rolf J, Eidels L. Characterization of the diphtheria toxin receptor-binding domain. Molecular Microbiology. 1993;7(4):585-591.</li>
 +
    </ol></h5>
 
</div>
 
</div>
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Latest revision as of 08:11, 17 October 2018

DIPHTOX
Using the wild-type diphtheria exotoxin to characterize HB-EGF/Tar receptor could be harmful due to biosafety reason. To tackle this problem, our team design a much simplified diphtheria toxin by removing the domain that is deadly to the cell. This domain, named domain C, will be translocated into the cell with the aid of other domains in toxin called domain R and domain T. Additionally, R domain recognized the natural HBEGF receptor, and T domain will insert the C domain into the cell. Thus, C domain would catalyze NAD-dependent ADP-ribosylation of EF-2 and leads to cellular apoptosis1. This remodeled toxin, coined DiphTox, is incorporated in the plasmids (such as pSB1C3 and pEQ80L) along with the following parts.

Figure 1. DiphTox Biobrick.

Amplification of single biobrick are done via PCR cloning using ‘self-made’ universal forward (Primer Cloning Fwd) and reverse primers (Primer Cloning Rev). The following sequences are the primers for PCR cloning.

Primers Sequence Melting Temperatures (Tm) GC Content (%) Hairpin Structure Energy Formation (kcal/mol) Self-dimer Energy Formation (kcal/mol)
Fwd Cloning 5’ AGTTCAAGTGTCCGAGAA 3’ 60.20C 44.4% 0.64 -3.61
Rev Cloning 5’ TAAGCGAGTGCCGTATTA 3’ 60.10C 44.4% -1.36 -3.61
Table 1. PCR Cloning Amplification Primers

Note: Both heterodimer energy formations are -3.61 kcal/mol. Additionally, the predicted specifications are based on IDT Oligo Analyzer 3.1 server. PCR solution is predicted to contain 0.2 mM dNTP, 50 mM Na+, 5 mM Mg2+, and 0.3 mM oligos.

Confirmation of gBlocks insertion into plasmid could be confirmed using PCR colony method using following primer. Note that HbT1 Fwd and HbT2 Rev is the same primer used in HT fragments to do in DipthTox gBlocks.

Primers Sequence Melting Temperatures (Tm) GC Content (%) Hairpin Structure Energy Formation (kcal/mol) Self-dimer Energy Formation (kcal/mol)
HbT1 Fwd 5’ CTTACGCTTCTGCCACAT 3’ 61.70C 50% -0.84 -3.61
HbT2 Rev 5’ CCCCTGACTGAGCATGAT 3’ 62.80C 55.6% 0.57 -5.38
Table 2. Detailed data for DiphTox PCR colony primers


Note: Both heterodimer energy formation exhibits -5.04 kcal/mol free energy.

For iGEM biobrick submission, we would use prefix and suffix that contain EcoRI and PstI. Further characterization of the biobrick of DiphTox could be accessed via http://parts.igem.org/Part:BBa_K2607000. HindIII site and BamHI are inserted upstream from prefix and downstream from suffix respectively. The DiphTox contains only the last 54 amino acid from the R domain which has no cytotoxicity and significant enough to bind with HBEGF receptor2. At the downstream of the sequence, designing six histidine amino acids is essential for His-tag protein purification, as well as characterizing the DiphTox and HB-EGF/Tar receptor kinetics. Ribosome Binding Site (RBS) is located upstream within the gBlocks containing Shine-Dalgarno sequence as follow.
RBS : 5' GAGCGGATTATATAAGGAGGTTAATC 3’

HB-EGF/Tar
HB-EGF/Tar is a synthetically combined receptor used as project’s diagnostic tool system. Since there was limitation in its biobrick construction (for its high DNA complexity and base pairs length as gBlocks), we separate the HB-EGF/Tar sequence into two fragments called HB-EGF/Tar Fragment 1 (HT-1) in the upstream, and the other one would be HB-EGF/Tar Fragment 2 (HT-2). The schematic structure of HT-1 biobrick is as follow.

Figure 2. HB-EGF/Tar Fragment 1 Biobrick.

The HT-1 fragment consist of 981 bp sequence that include SalI cutting site and specified PCR colony reverse primer (HbT1 rev). Amplification of single biobrick are done via PCR cloning using ‘self-made’ universal forward (Primer Cloning Fwd) and reverse primers (Primer Cloning Rev), which are the same as cloning primer for DiphTox gBlocks.

For confirmation of this biobrick existence inside E. coli, PCR colony is essential, using specific primers named “PCR colony HbT1 fwd” for forward primer and “PCR colony HbT1 rev” for reverse primer. They are constructed using NCBI primer BLAST website. The sequences are served as follows.

Primers Sequence Melting Temperatures (Tm) GC Content (%) Hairpin Structure Energy Formation (kcal/mol) Self-dimer Energy Formation (kcal/mol)
HbT1 Fwd 5’ CTTACGCTTCTGCCACAT 3’ 61.70C 50% -0.84 -3.61
HbT1 Rev 5’ TTCTTACGCTTCCCATGTTC 3’ 62.10C 45% 0.64 -5.38
Table 3. Detailed data for HT1 PCR colony primers


Note: Both heterodimer energy formations are -4.77 kcal/mol.

Biobrick RFC10 prefix is necessary and would be cut using EcoRI enzyme for submission. Active gene transcription includes highly expressing T7 constitutive promoter (Bba_I712074) located in the upstream part of HT-1. Ribosomal binding site (RBS) (Bba_B0034) functions to initiate direct HB-EGF/Tar translation (HbTf1-RBS). It is 18 bp in length with the following sequence, 5' AAAGAGGAGAAATACTAG 3’, conformed with Shine-Dalgarno sequence
The next fragment of HB-EGF/Tar Sequence, called HB-EGF/Tar Fragment 2 (HT-2), will be ligated exactly next to the first one via SalI restriction site. Schematic representation of HB-EGF/Tar Fragment 2 is as follow.

Figure 3. HB-EGF/Tar Fragment 2 Biobrick.

To amplify this part, we would use universal PCR cloning forward and reverse primers with their sequences same as HT-1 and DiphTox gBlocks. PCR colony, with a specific primer named “HbT2 fwd” for forward primer and “HbT2 Rev” for reverse primer, could be used to confirm any successful transformation of ligated insert. Both primers are constructed with NCBI primer BLAST website and have the sequence detailed below.

Primers Sequence Melting Temperatures (Tm) GC Content (%) Hairpin Structure Energy Formation (kcal/mol) Self-dimer Energy Formation (kcal/mol)
HbT2 Fwd 5’ GTTAGCGGTCTCAGAAATGG 3’ 62.20C 50% -1.15 -3.61
HbT2 Rev 5’ CCCCTGACTGAGCATGAT 3’ 62.80C 55.6% 0.57 -5.38
Table 4. detailed data for HT2 PCR colony primers


Note: Both heterodimer energy formations are -6.73 kcal/mol.

In this fragment, SalI and NdeI are in upstream and downstream respectively. This arrangement would enable that HB-EGF/Tar frag 1 and HB-EGF/Tar frag 2 be next to each other and transcribed as a unity. At the end part of the coding region we add double terminator rrnB T1 and T7TE terminator (Bba_B0015). These terminators have been known to effectively terminate transcription of any gene. We shall submit the overall HB-EGF/Tar biobrick sequence by inserting iGEM registered RFC10 suffix that contain PstI restriction site at the downstream of the coding region. The prefix, as mentioned earlier, is inserted in the first fragment of the HB-EGF/Tar sequence. Further characterization of the biobrick of complete HB-EGF/Tar synthetic gene could be accessed via Further characterization of the biobrick of DiphTox could be accessed via http://parts.igem.org/Part:BBa_K2607001.

Reference
  1. Gillet D, Barbier J. Diphtheria toxin. The Comprehensive Sourcebook of Bacterial Protein Toxins. 2015;:111-132.
  2. 2. Rolf J, Eidels L. Characterization of the diphtheria toxin receptor-binding domain. Molecular Microbiology. 1993;7(4):585-591.
Team UI Indonesia
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