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<h2>RIP Secretion <a href="http://parts.igem.org/Part:BBa_K2616001"> BBa_K2616001</a></h2><br><br> | <h2>RIP Secretion <a href="http://parts.igem.org/Part:BBa_K2616001"> BBa_K2616001</a></h2><br><br> | ||
− | <p>The <b>sequence</b> we designed contains two <b>RIP (RNAIII Inhibiting Peptide)</b> sequences fused to two different export signal peptides for <i>E. coli</i> Type II Secretion System: <b>DsbA</b> and <b>MalE</b>, placed on N-terminal | + | <p>The <b>sequence</b> we designed contains two <b>RIP (RNAIII Inhibiting Peptide)</b> sequences fused to two different export signal peptides for <i>E. coli</i> Type II Secretion System: <b>DsbA</b> and <b>MalE</b>, placed on N-terminal (Figure 11). The cassette is composed of RIP sequence (blue) fused to DsbA signal (green) and further RIP sequence again (green) fused to MalE signal (red) (Figure 11).<br><br></p> |
<div class="block two-third center"> | <div class="block two-third center"> | ||
<img src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2018/f/fd/T--Pasteur_Paris--BBa_K2616001.png"> | <img src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2018/f/fd/T--Pasteur_Paris--BBa_K2616001.png"> | ||
− | <div class="legend"><b>Figure 11: </b> | + | <div class="legend"><b>Figure 11: </b> Schematic representation of the RIP production cassette.</div> |
</div> | </div> | ||
<p>Once we received the sequence encoding for this production cassette named Seq8 (461bp) in commercial plasmid pEX-A258 by gene synthesis. Plasmids was amplified in competent <i>E. coli</i> DH5alpha. After bacteria culture and plasmid DNA extraction, we digested commercial vector with <b>EcoRI</b> and <b>PstI</b> restriction enzymes. We extracted the inserts from the gel and performed a ligation by using specific overlaps into <b>linearized pBR322</b> for RIP expression and into <b>pSB1C3</b> for iGEM sample submission.<br> | <p>Once we received the sequence encoding for this production cassette named Seq8 (461bp) in commercial plasmid pEX-A258 by gene synthesis. Plasmids was amplified in competent <i>E. coli</i> DH5alpha. After bacteria culture and plasmid DNA extraction, we digested commercial vector with <b>EcoRI</b> and <b>PstI</b> restriction enzymes. We extracted the inserts from the gel and performed a ligation by using specific overlaps into <b>linearized pBR322</b> for RIP expression and into <b>pSB1C3</b> for iGEM sample submission.<br> |
Revision as of 14:45, 17 October 2018
RECONNECT NERVES
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Achievements:
- Successfully cloned a part coding for secretion of NGF in pET43.1a and iGEM plasmid backbone pSB1C3, creating a new part BBa_K2616000.
- Successfully sequenced BBa_K2616000 in pSB1C3 and sent to iGEM registry.
- Successfully co-transformed E. coli with plasmid secreting NGF and plasmid expressing the secretion system, creating bacteria capable of secreting NGF in the medium.
- Successfully characterized production of NGF thanks to mass spectrometry.
- Successfully observe axon growth in microfluidic chip in presence of commercial NGF.
Next steps:
- Purify secreted NGF, and characterize its effects on neuron growth thanks to our microfluidic device.
- Global proof of concept in a microfluidic device containing neurons in one of the chamber, and our engineered bacteria in the other.
FIGHT INFECTIONS
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Achievements:
- Successfully cloned a part coding for RIP secretion in pBR322 and in pSB1C3, creating a new part Bba_K2616001 .
- Successfully sequenced Bba_K2616001 in pSB1C3 and sent to iGEM registry.
- Successfully cultivated S. aureus biofilms in 96 well plates with different supernatants.
Next steps:
- Clone the sensor device with inducible RIP production upon S. aureus detection.
- Improve the characterization of RIP effect on biofilm formation.
KILL SWITCH
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Achievements:
- Successfully cloned a part coding for toxin/antitoxin (CcdB/CcdA) system in iGEM plasmid backbone, creating a new part.
- Successfully observed survival of our engineered bacteria at 25°C and 37°C and absence of growth at 18°C and 20°C, showing the efficiency of the kill switch.
Next steps:
- Find a system that kills bacteria when released in the environment rather than just stopping their growth.