Team:SDU-Denmark/safety-b

From 2010.igem.org

(Difference between revisions)
(Assessment by local bio-safety group)
(watermarking standard)
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==== watermarking standard ====
==== watermarking standard ====
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Watermarking
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To increase public safety we propose to introduce a water-marking standard.
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To increase public safety we propose to introduce a water-marking standard
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Following the example of Craig Venter, who, in may 2010, created the first watermark in a bacteria, containing several readable messages, we propose to create a watermarking standard to help protect the intellectual rights of the developing team, as well as the safety of the community at large.
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Following the example of J. Craig Venter, who, in may 2010, created the first watermark in a bacteria, containing several readable messages, we propose to create a watermarking standard to increase the safety of the environment, as well as the safety of the community at large.
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We believe that a watermark should contain the following:
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Why we should consider watermarking
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    -the name of the organism
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But why should we consider creating and using a watermarking standard for work in synthetic biology? Let us consider the following example.
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    -the name of the developing team
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    -a link to the parts-registry containing:
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        -a full description of the organism
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        -the risk-assessment performed by the creating team, if available
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        -the intended use of the organism
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        -copyright information
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        -information on how to neutralise organism, and, if available, kill-code
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A company has created a synthetic organism capable of absorbing harmful substances from the ground. The government, eager to help clean polluted ground, releases the bacteria into the wild, confident that the bacteria will not pose any threat to the environment. These bacteria do not, however, react as planned. Instead of absorbing only the harmful substances from the ground, they transfer the substances to other organisms, or simply run amok spreading themselves in an uncontrolled manner, causing harm instead of good. Let us imagine that this happens close to the border. The government in the neighboring state finds itself with a unexplained biological phenomenon, possibly causing great harm. Should the rogue bacteria contain engineered, watermarked parts, it would be a small matter to have the parts sequenced, thus the government would be able to easily access all the relevant information on the rogue bacteria, contact the manufacturers and would know how to stop it.
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'''The watermark'''
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''We believe that a watermark should contain the following:''
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  <nowiki>  I.        A 12 nucleotide ‘license’</nowiki>
We have set the following criteria for a good watermark:
We have set the following criteria for a good watermark:
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<nowiki>
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    I.        It should contain the creating team’s ‘license’
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  II.        It should not interfere with the other functions of the part
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  III.        It should be persistent in the plasmid, i.e. not be removed from the plasmid due to natural evolution
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IV.        It should be easy to find, easy to read and easy to insert by the developing team
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</nowiki>
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We have set the following criteria to the team page in the parts-registry:
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  <nowiki>                                       
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    I.        information on the creating team
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  II.        the name of the part
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  III.        a description of the part
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IV.        the risk-assessment performed by the creating team
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  V.        information on how to neutralize organism, and, if available, kill-code
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</nowiki>
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'''
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Placing the watermark'''
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The initial thought was to insert the watermark into the genome of the bacteria, as to increase the stability of the watermark in the bacteria. However, as all parts inserted into the bacteria are placed in plasmids, it would make no sense to insert the watermark into the genome. The bacteria could transfer their plasmids to other bacteria, and retain their watermark, and the watermark would have become useless, persisting in bacteria that have no modified material at all.
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Also the thought was to mark the bacteria, and not the parts. Thus we could have a single watermark to cover the entire modified organism. However, this presents us with many of the above problems. Should anyone encounter a rogue bacteria which has lost some of its plasmids, the watermark would be useless. It would only cover the entire modified system, and should some, or all, the plasmids have been discarded by the bacteria, the watermark would be useless. We therefore propose to mark every plasmid, before and after the coding sequence. The watermark will therefore be split into two separate components. The team creates a watermark for every part, and inserts it into the plasmid, before and after the coding sequence.
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We chose to divide the code into two separate parts for two reasons. Firstly, being split into two equally long parts at each end of the coding sequence ensures symmetry, which again should help make insertion of a watermark easy, as this will reduce the complexity of the primers we need to design to insert them. Secondly this ensures that identification is done easily, since the combination of nucleotides of the sequence from E to X and from S to P is known. Thus we effectively increase the sequence we search for from 6 to 26 nucleotides.  Also this means that the risk of a naturally occurring combination of nucleotides, identical to the synthetically created one decreases.
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<nowiki>
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E      X        Start                                              End              S          P
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|------|----------|-------------------------------------------|---------------|---------|
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    watermark 1        coding sequence              watermark 2         
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    license part 1                                                                                      license part 2
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</nowiki>
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Sequencing the part should therefore yield the watermark, which could then be accessed, read and understood.
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'''Alternative placement'''
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We also thought about the possibility of placing the watermark between the cutting sites of E and X, and S and P respectively. Since this area is a spacing area, it might be a good spot to insert the nucleotide combination we want. Difficulties this might cause include disturbing ... (hvad præcist? – LC snakkede om at kombinationen blev brugt til at forstærke et eller andet..). Another idea was to expand the restriction sites E-X and S-P, but we are uncertain whether this might disturb the functionality of the part.
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'''
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Size and design'''
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Placing the watermark after the restriction sites, it should be relatively small, as to not interfere with the functionality of the part into which it is inserted. We propose that the watermark should be 12 nucleotides, divided in two groups of six which will allow for 4096 combinations each.
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The watermark must not contain any restriction-enzymes or stop codons. If the watermark accidentally contained a restriction-enzyme or a stop codon, the watermark would interfere with the function of the part into which it is inserted, and would likely render the part useless. This severely restricts the number of combinations we can use.
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Ideally we would have liked to use more nucleotides, as we would have been able to generate more combinations. But the watermark should be as small as possible as not to interfere with the functions (i.e. cause a frame shift) of the part and not make the design of primers unduly complicated. We could make relatively long watermarks to satisfy our need for a very large number of possible combinations, but it would make the design of the necessary primers extremely complicated, and would go against our goal of making the insertion of watermarks as small and easy a procedure as possible. We believe that the best compromise between the amount of combinations and the ease of insertion would be at around 12 nucleotides. [RÆSONNEMENT? udregninger?]
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We talked about whether or not we should mark every part or only create a watermark for each composite part. [HVAD BLEV VI LIGE ENIGE OM, HVIS NOGET?]
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'''License'''
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Every team, and lab / company which works with synthetic biology will be assigned a specific “license plate”, unique to them and being their ‘ID’ on parts-registry. An extension to parts registry’s search function should then be added. If its database contains information on each “license”, one could easily find information on a foreign organism, in case they found it in the wild (that is, anywhere else than the lab), and had it sequenced afterwards. Upon entering the parts-registry, one should then be able to enter the license and gain access to information on the parts that the team / lab / company has created. Anyone should be able to enter the license code into the parts-registry and gain access to all information on the creating team, the parts created by the team, and of course some contact information, in order to seek advice.
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    -It should contain all the above information
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'''Procedure'''
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    -It should not interfere with the other functions of the bacteria
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    -It should be persistent in the bacteria, i.e. not be removed from the genome due to natural evolution
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    -It should be easy to find, easy to read and easy to insert by the developing team
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notes
 
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The watermark must be inserted into the genome, and not in a plasmid, as it would in theory be able to pass it's watermark on unto other naturally occurring bacteria.
 
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The watermark should be relatively small, as it should not interfere with the functionality of the bacteria. >< Should be connected to a vital function as not to be removed due to natural evolution, perhaps linked to the bacterias metabolism.
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Retrieval of the watermark should be easy, in the event of a rogue bacteria spreading havoc in the environment. Standardized placement of the watermark within the part should make it possible to easily retrieving the watermark through sequencing. Thus, if a rogue bacteria is discovered, it should be a simple matter to sequence the part, and obtain the license. Then it is just a matter of consulting the parts-registry to access all available information on the part and on how to contact the creating team. Getting a bacteria sequenced is a technology which is easy to access, and a lot of companies worldwide offers sequencing of bacteria, in addition it is a relative speedy process, which further makes the identification of a malign bacteria, and its properties relatively easy.
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Standarlized location or function in the bacteria targeted for insertion of watermark, to make it as easy as possible to locate watermark in rogue bacteria. Should be possible to develop specialized enzyme to cut genome at the desired location, making the creation of a standardized watermarking kit possible.
 
''A full description of the modified organism''
''A full description of the modified organism''

Revision as of 14:53, 15 October 2010