RESULTS
Introduction
These are our list of results that we have successfully acquired through our two-year run developing this project. Special thanks to Lisa Oberding for helping with our Gene Design, Gene Synthesis, and Transformation.
Gene Design
The 4 constructs that we have designed, with the help of our mentor Lisa Oberding and previous iGem teams (especially Tianjin 2016), include:
- a polyethylene terephthalate hydrolase (PET-ase) fused to a red fluorescent protein, (or RFP) called mCherry, which gives the protein its colour aspect,
- a hydrophobin called BslA fused to mCherry,
- a PET-ase without the RFP, and
- a BslA without RFP.
Special care was taken to ensure the sequences did not include any extra restriction enzyme sites and to design the coding regions to be expressed successfully in BOTH E. coli and B. subtilis cells. See our parts pages for further details regarding these parts.
Implemented prototype, what could be seen in a sorting facility. |
Gene Synthesis
The gene constructs we have created with the help of Lisa were synthesized by Bio Basic and shipped to us for transformation. The plasmids were ordered both in the standard pSB1C3 backbone, as well as a second “shuttle” backbone we hope to use in the future for testing on Bacillus specifically.
Transformations
Our lab tried repeatedly to transform our cells. We had success with E. coli but were unable to transform Bacillus subtilis on our own. Thank you to Amino Labs who hosted us over the summer for a second (though unsuccessful) round of attempts at Bacillus transformation. Thankfully our mentor, Lisa Oberding from Fredsense Technologies, was able to help us successfully transform both E.coli and B.subtilis cells with each of our four constructs.
These pictures are our constructs in E.coli DH5alpha. The ones on the left are imaged under regular light and the picture on the right is under UV light. The coding system Lisa used for the test is:
- E - PET-ase
- F - mCherry PET-ase
- G - BslA
- H - mCherry BslA
Machine Prototype
With our constructs design in place, we had to design a way of using them in a real life situation. Drawing on our experiences visiting real sorting facilities, and using the feedback and insights gained from the people working in this industry, we have designed a prototype using existing technology to adapt to our solution. A simplified description of our prototype includes the following steps:
- Incoming, unsorted plastics move along a conveyor belt and pass through a bath of our purified protein bio-tag.
- Our bio-tag selectively adheres only to PET plastics.
- Next all plastics will pass through a wash or rinse. The bio-tag is removed from any non-PET plastics.
- An optical scanner detects the fluorescent signature of mCherry on the PET plastics, and will separate it from the rest of the plastic.
- In future, similar bio-tags can be developed to selectively mark all other recyclable plastics using similar design principles.