Team:SDU-Denmark/project-t

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(Retinal biosynthesis)
(Retinal biosynthesis)
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==== Retinal biosynthesis ====
==== Retinal biosynthesis ====
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Our construct uses genes from the plant pathogen ''Pantoea ananatis'' and from the fruit fly, ''Drosophila melanogaster''.  <br></p>
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Retinal is synthesised from the enzymatic cleavage of some carotenes. In our system we focus on cleavage of beta-carotene, partly because it yields 2 all-trans retinal molecules which is the molecule we desire, and partly because the beta-carotene biosynthesis pathway has been introduced to E. coli already by the Cambridge 2009 iGEM team.
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The Cambridge construct uses genes from the plant pathogen ''Pantoea ananatis'' and our construct completes the pathway to retinal with a gene from the common fruit fly, ''Drosophila melanogaster''.  <br></p>
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In our construct, part of the synthesis is carried out by the BioBrick K274210, created by the Cambridge team in 2009. It consists of four genes ''crtE'', ''crtB'', ''crtI'' and ''crtY'' from ''P. ananatis'' that together make up the pathway that converts farnesyl pyrophosphate to beta-carotene, which is a precursor for retinal. <br>
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The Cambridge 2009 construct consists of four genes ''crtE'', ''crtB'', ''crtI'' and ''crtY'' from ''P. ananatis'' that together make up the pathway that converts farnesyl pyrophosphate to beta-carotene, which is a precursor for retinal. farnesyl pyrophosphate is naturally pressent in E. coli. <br>
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• ''crtE'' encodes the protein geranyl-geranyl pyrophosphate synthase that converts farnesyl pyrophosphate to geranyl-geranyl pyrophosphate by elongating it by one unit of isopentenyl. <br>
• ''crtE'' encodes the protein geranyl-geranyl pyrophosphate synthase that converts farnesyl pyrophosphate to geranyl-geranyl pyrophosphate by elongating it by one unit of isopentenyl. <br>

Revision as of 16:21, 25 October 2010