Team:ESBS-Strasbourg/Project/Application
From 2010.igem.org
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- | <li><a href="#knock"> | + | <li><a href="#knock">Protein analysis</a></li> |
<li><a href="#flip">Flip Flop</a></li> | <li><a href="#flip">Flip Flop</a></li> | ||
<li><a href="#geneos">Genetic Oscillator </a></li> | <li><a href="#geneos">Genetic Oscillator </a></li> | ||
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As previously described, our degradation system consists of an engineered protease which can be activated by light impulses. This allows a tight control over the catalytic activity core enabling the modulation of protein function in a general fashion with the combined characteristics of specificity, high temporal precision and rapid reversibility. | As previously described, our degradation system consists of an engineered protease which can be activated by light impulses. This allows a tight control over the catalytic activity core enabling the modulation of protein function in a general fashion with the combined characteristics of specificity, high temporal precision and rapid reversibility. | ||
- | + | The system is easily adaptable to new targets proteins, the target-labeling only requires the fusion to the specific degradation tag and PIF. This offers a very cheap, easy and applicable method for protein analysis. | |
- | The system is easily adaptable to new targets proteins, the target-labeling only requires the fusion to the specific degradation tag and PIF. This offers a very cheap easy and applicable method for protein analysis. | + | |
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One of the major advantages is the "non invasive" induction of the protein degradation. Chemical genetics enable perturbations through the introduction of cell membrane-permeable small molecules, allowing the conditional regulation of activity through non-covalent and reversible interactions which is convenient for studies at the cellular level. The use of photolabile ‘‘caged’’ chemical compounds allows to affect subcellular targets in a second-timescale. Some chemical photoswitches such as azobenzene even offer reversible photo-control when attached to macromolecules <i><a href="https://2010.igem.org/Team:ESBS-Strasbourg/Project/Reference">[26]</a></i>. However, the requirement to introduce exogenous, chemically modified materials into cells limits the use of these methods in biological applications. | One of the major advantages is the "non invasive" induction of the protein degradation. Chemical genetics enable perturbations through the introduction of cell membrane-permeable small molecules, allowing the conditional regulation of activity through non-covalent and reversible interactions which is convenient for studies at the cellular level. The use of photolabile ‘‘caged’’ chemical compounds allows to affect subcellular targets in a second-timescale. Some chemical photoswitches such as azobenzene even offer reversible photo-control when attached to macromolecules <i><a href="https://2010.igem.org/Team:ESBS-Strasbourg/Project/Reference">[26]</a></i>. However, the requirement to introduce exogenous, chemically modified materials into cells limits the use of these methods in biological applications. | ||
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<a name="geneos"></a> | <a name="geneos"></a> | ||
<p><b>Genetic Oscillator</b></p> | <p><b>Genetic Oscillator</b></p> | ||
- | The idea of the flip flop mechanism can be extended to a genetic oscillator with three, four or even more sequential steps. Natural oscillator circuits are autonomous | + | The idea of the flip flop mechanism can be extended to a genetic oscillator with three, four or even more sequential steps. Such an implementation would present a genetically encoded device to store multiple bits of information within a living cell.<br> |
+ | Natural oscillator circuits are autonomous orchestrating periodic inductions of specific target genes and are found in central and peripheral circadian clocks <i><a href="https://2010.igem.org/Team:ESBS-Strasbourg/Project/Reference">[38]</a></i>. Many physiological activities are coordinated by circadian pacemakers <i><a href="https://2010.igem.org/Team:ESBS-Strasbourg/Project/Reference">[43],[44]</a></i>, making them particular interesting. Synthetic oscillator circuits which mediate protein expression dynamics could provide new insights into protein networks of by simulating natural conditions. <br> | ||
+ | <br> | ||
+ | Figure 3 shows an example of a three step oscillator. This oscillator is tightly controlled by light and allows the sequentially expression of three different genes. | ||
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Latest revision as of 00:15, 28 October 2010
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