Team:Edinburgh/Results

From 2010.igem.org

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<h3>Characterisation of Red Light:</h3><br>
<h3>Characterisation of Red Light:</h3><br>
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<p>The Red Light emission was characterised using a Spectrophotometric laser microscope
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<p>The Red Light emission was characterised using a Spectrophotometric laser microscope, and shown to have been successfully mutated from the Wild Type, as seen in the emission spectrum. We also considered the effect of temperature on the protein, and found 30 degrees Celsius incubations to produce a much brighter effect.
<h3>The FORTH Framework:</h3><br>
<h3>The FORTH Framework:</h3><br>

Revision as of 19:53, 27 October 2010







Project Results


The following sections summarise the main results we achieved during our summer of working on iGEM, and on the various strands of our Communicating through BRIDGEs project. We would like to emphasise, both here and elsewhere, that although we were unable to accomplish absolutely everything that we aimed for, we made great progress in gaining preliminary results and in establishing the foundation of extremely useful (and promotable!) technologies. This section of our wiki will list what we have achieved so far; elsewhere in the individual 'Future' pages for each section, we will also summarise our progress on what we'd like to do next and any issues that remain, including listing possible reasons for the problems we currently face and the experiments that are currently undergoing to test these.

Of course, we are still continuing experiments and hope to have more data to present at the Jamboree... the results presented here are nought but a snapshot in time!

The results we have achieved for...

The future we foresee for...

And finally, the conclusions we would like to make from our experiences over the summer.



Results: Genomic BRIDGEs


Characterisation of cat:


We demonstrated that cell lines containing cat in pSB1A2 grew on both ampicillin (100mg/ml) chloramphenicol (40mg/ml) whereas cell lines containing a pSB1A2 control (Edinbrick) only grew on ampicillin (100mg/ml) (see the characterisation here). This proves that cells successfully transformed with cat during the BRIDGE process should be able to grow in cml40.



Characterisation of sacB:


We demonstrated that cell lines containing sacB are unable to grow in sucrose at a concentration of 10% compared to control cells which grew normally (see the characterisation here). This confirms its usefulness as a negative selection marker in the BRIDGE protocol and provided us with conditions for selection at the end of the second step of the protocol.



Protocol:


The majority of ground gained in our time working on the actual protocol for BRIDGE was in the adjustment of experimental procedure and the design of control experiments.

We managed to fine-tune the protocol to our resources and particular strains without causing damage to the cells. For example, we confirmed that ddH20 is not necessary for the washing step. Despite having access to ddH20 we used cold sterile water, which is just as effective at removing LB and antibiotic from cell cultures. These tweaks make the procedure slightly more cost and time effective, especially for labs with limited resources.

We narrowed down the source of entry of a contaminant< which was repeatedly infecting our selection plates by sampling the cells at every stage after exposure to unsterile air, a solution, or an instrument. Through use of negative controls and stringent aseptic technique we managed to eliminate contamination entirely. For example, we sampled the sterile water we had been using and moved our washing step the clean hood, away from sterile air. These controls enabled us to edit the protocol to advise others on how to avoid contamination and how to find the source of a contaminant should it occur.

We developed a simple titre of antibiotic resistance by growing our transformants in increasing concentrations of chloramphenicol along with negative controls. This can be used to determine a) the level of success of the procedure and b) the level of resistance of an antibiotic resistance gene (making good characterisation data for the Registry.

Unfortunately we never achieved our goal of replacing tnaA with the cat/sacB construct via recombineering, but our lab will continue to work with this protocol, possibly replacing the cat gene with a kanamycin resistance gene.

For anyone wishing to use the BRIDGE protocol we recommend focusing on the recombinase induction step, as this seems to be the problem area which results in the lack of recombinants.





Results: Bacterial BRIDGEs


Characterisation of Blue Light Sensor:


Characterisation of Blue Light:


Characterisation of Green Light Sensor:


Characterisation of Green Light:


Characterisation of Red Light Sensor:


We have successfully transformed cells with the Red Light Sensor biobricks and attempted to characterise them using both the lacZ and the YFP reporter systems we introduced to the construct. The characterisation produced some preliminary data - found on the RLS page - which we will continue to work on, enhancing the sensitivity of our characterisation assays and the test systems for the sensor, in an attempt to further characterise the system.

Characterisation of Red Light:


The Red Light emission was characterised using a Spectrophotometric laser microscope, and shown to have been successfully mutated from the Wild Type, as seen in the emission spectrum. We also considered the effect of temperature on the protein, and found 30 degrees Celsius incubations to produce a much brighter effect.

The FORTH Framework:






Results: Modelling BRIDGEs


The completed models:


The main result achieved by the modelling component of our project was the theoretical conclusion that, given the information available and the assumptions made, the biological systems proposed throughout our project should work. The genomic BRIDGEs model provided verification of the time course of the BRIDGE protocol. The intracellular bacterial BRIDGEs model acted to verify the idea of a light-based repressilating system, and to confirm that the responses of the various light pathways were as expected. Finally, the intercellular bacterial BRIDGEs model established the concept of light-based communication within colonies of cells, in all its complexity.

Each of the above models was extensively analysed via a variety of methods available, in an attempt to push the boundaries of understanding regarding the biological processes embodied within. Some interesting results were revealed, but overall this extensive analysis did much to reinforce the conclusion made above - that theoretically, our proposed light communication systems should work!



The Kappa BioBrick framework:


Throughout the process, Ty Thomson's framework for modelling BioBricks in Kappa was found to be an invaluable aid in organising and thoroughly describing the biological parts involved. Whether in simply ensuring that the entirety of the BioBrick's actions were described, or in making explicit the correlation between various rate parameters and their effects upon the model, the usefulness of such a structured and standardised framework in developing biological models cannot be understated. We hope in the near future to be able to extend this into the basis of a 'Virtual Registry' of modelled and characterised BioBrick parts and devices, with corresponding tools to aid design and simulation..

One final result that hopefully was achieved by our modelling is the establishment and promotion of the Kappa stochastic rule-based modelling language as a BioBrick-friendly alternative to traditional methods of modelling such as differential equations. From its introduction to iGEM by last year's Edinburgh team, this year its use has spread to a handful of other teams as well... we are hopeful that this trend will continue in the near future, due to the numerous advantages that are inherent in the approach.



Results: Human BRIDGEs


***





Results: In conclusion


When we sat down to draft this conclusion, our immediate reaction was... where to begin? As stated above, the information contained on this wiki is merely a snapshot in time. It is nowhere near the end for the techniques and technologies we have sought to develop

It's perhaps true that our project isn't quite as flashy as some others, or that it hasn't developed anything quite so immediately useful. But, as befitting of an iGEM project in the Foundational Advances track, we believe that we have made great strides towards the future of synthetic biology. Without reiterating what has already been said above, BRIDGE, FORTH, and the Kappa BioBrick modelling framework are all important fundamental developments in the field that we hope will inspire and aid many researchers to come.

Synthetic biology is an ever-evolving field, aspiring to greatness both now and in the future. How advantageous would it be to be able to perform efficient markerless insertion across the whole genome? How cool would it be to replace all street lighting with bioluminescent trees? How useful would it be to have biosensors that communicate with one another or with a computer via light production and sensing? How efficient would it be to be able to accurately design and understand whole systems via a standardised modelling framework? These are but a few of the possibilities we see stemming from our work over the summer.

We have achieved much. We have learnt more. And we have had a whole load of fun.

And we think about synthetic biology differently now.

The question is... how do you think?




Throughout this wiki there are words in bold that indicate a relevance to human aspects. It will become obvious that human aspects are a part of almost everything in iGEM.