Team:UC Davis/Projects

From 2010.igem.org

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var pHContent = "<br/><p class='header'>THE PROBLEM</p>Cellular machines are not isolated systems.  They have an intimate relationship with their surroundings and must change with varying environmental conditions.  To do this, they rely on sensory machinery to trigger internal responses based on external stimuli such as light, chemical concentrations, etc.  Sensors have been engineered for the E. coli chassis but one stimulus has been neglected: pH.<br/><br/>  Cells thrive in a limited pH range; the optimal range for E. coli being 6-7.  If the pH is much different than this, the cell must take action to survive.  This needs to be taken into account when designing cellular machines which are reactive to pH changes.  A pH sensitive system from another organism would help keep the engineered response independent.  This would allow the desired response to be separate from a native stress response. <br/><br/><div style='text-align:center'><img src='https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2010/a/ac/Mes_photo.jpg'></div><br/><br/><p class='header'>APPROACH</p>In the native host, Agrobacterium tumefaciens, the pH sensing machinery is a two component system consisting of the ChvG and ChvI genes.  ChvG is the membrane bound histidine kinase and ChvI is the chromosomal response regulatory gene.  The pH sensing machinery is flawlessly intertwined in the vast number of other simultaneously occurring processes.  Ideally, it could be transplanted into E. coli without affecting any other pathway, although the possibility of this happening is next to none.  We do not know how the construct will behave in it's new environment, but we do expect some unwanted crosstalk caused by differing pH and phosphate levels within the new host.<br/><br/>Four promoters are likely to be activated by the ChvG/ChvI in A. tumefaciens: KatA, ImpA, ChvG, and AopB.  We took these sequences and placed them upstream of RFP to measure the extent to which they are activated in E. coli.  Another promoter, PhoA was also chosen to be tested with the ChvG/ChvI construct since it is similar to the PhoB/PhoR two-component system.  We expect some activation of the PhoA promoter at high phosphate levels when the PhoB/PhoR system is deactivated.";
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var pHContent = "<br/><p class='header'>THE PROBLEM</p>Cellular machines are not isolated systems.  They have an intimate relationship with their surroundings and must change with varying environmental conditions.  To do this, they rely on sensory machinery to trigger internal responses based on external stimuli such as light, chemical concentrations, etc.  Sensors have been engineered for the E. coli chassis but one stimulus has been neglected: pH.<br/><br/>  Cells thrive in a limited pH range; the optimal range for E. coli being 6-7.  If the pH is much different than this, the cell must take action to survive.  This needs to be taken into account when designing cellular machines which are reactive to pH changes.  A pH sensitive system from another organism would help keep the engineered response independent.  This would allow the desired response to be separate from a native stress response. <br/><br/><div style='text-align:center'><img src='https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2010/a/ac/Mes_photo.jpg'></div><br/><br/><p class='header'>APPROACH</p>In the native host, Agrobacterium tumefaciens, the pH sensing machinery is a two component system consisting of the ChvG and ChvI genes.  ChvG is the membrane bound histidine kinase and ChvI is the chromosomal response regulatory gene.  The pH sensing machinery is flawlessly intertwined in the vast number of other simultaneously occurring processes.  Ideally, it could be transplanted into E. coli without affecting any other pathway, although the possibility of this happening is next to none.  We do not know how the construct will behave in it's new environment, but we do expect some unwanted crosstalk caused by differing pH and phosphate levels within the new host.<br/><br/>Four promoters are likely to be activated by the ChvG/ChvI in A. tumefaciens: KatA, ImpA, ChvG, and AopB.  We took these sequences and placed them upstream of RFP to measure the extent to which they are activated in E. coli.  Another promoter, PhoA was also chosen to be tested with the ChvG/ChvI construct since both the ChvG/ChvI and PhoB/PhoR two-component systems are similar.  We expect some activation of the PhoA promoter at high phosphate levels when the PhoB/PhoR system is deactivated.";
var spatialContent = "<br/><p class='header'>MOTIVATION</p>Patterns are everywhere in biology.  Some, like zebra stripes, are easy to see, while other patterns like those that appear during animal development may be more subtle.  Underneath the expression of these patterns are complex genetic networks that interpret specific cues from the environment and use this data to direct cells, or even populations of cells, to self organize and act.<br/><p class='header'>THE PROJECT</p>Given the importance of pattern generation in biology, we wanted to see if we could construct a synthetic circuit that would allow us to generate patterns in a community of inter-communicating cells in response to a simple stimuli; in our case, this stimuli would be light.<br/><br/>In order to mimic the process by which groups of cells can communicate to ultimately form a pattern, we will be using a lawn of E. Coli cells as our multicellular model system.  These cells would be designed to communicate with each other through quorum sensing, and based on the small signaling molecules that each cell \"patch\" produces, the subsequent cell patch will know whether to activate or remain inactive.<br/><br/>In our system, the activated cells would produce colored pigment in order to indicate that they have been activated, and the cells that remain inactive will produce no color.  In this way, the lawn of E. Coli cells would produce an oscillatory pattern of active and inactive \"bands\" of color and no color.  ";
var spatialContent = "<br/><p class='header'>MOTIVATION</p>Patterns are everywhere in biology.  Some, like zebra stripes, are easy to see, while other patterns like those that appear during animal development may be more subtle.  Underneath the expression of these patterns are complex genetic networks that interpret specific cues from the environment and use this data to direct cells, or even populations of cells, to self organize and act.<br/><p class='header'>THE PROJECT</p>Given the importance of pattern generation in biology, we wanted to see if we could construct a synthetic circuit that would allow us to generate patterns in a community of inter-communicating cells in response to a simple stimuli; in our case, this stimuli would be light.<br/><br/>In order to mimic the process by which groups of cells can communicate to ultimately form a pattern, we will be using a lawn of E. Coli cells as our multicellular model system.  These cells would be designed to communicate with each other through quorum sensing, and based on the small signaling molecules that each cell \"patch\" produces, the subsequent cell patch will know whether to activate or remain inactive.<br/><br/>In our system, the activated cells would produce colored pigment in order to indicate that they have been activated, and the cells that remain inactive will produce no color.  In this way, the lawn of E. Coli cells would produce an oscillatory pattern of active and inactive \"bands\" of color and no color.  ";

Revision as of 19:28, 5 October 2010

Spatial Oscillation pH Sensor Crosstalk Predictor
Spatial Oscillation
We would like to take a moment to thank all of our sponsors for their very generous donations, as we could not have done this without your help!

We would also like to thank and acknowledge:
Our Advisors
Marc Facciotti
Ilias Tagkopoulos
Technical Guidance
David Larsen
Andrew Yao
Visiting iGEMer
Jia Li of Zhejiang University (TEAM ZJU-China)
cI Promoter Screen
Drew Endy - Stanford
Thomas Schneider - NIH
Want to sponsor us? Send an email to mtfacciotti@ucdavis.edu to discuss various ways you can help! :)