Team:Gothenburg-Sweden/Project/more
From 2010.igem.org
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Our contribution to the IGEM competition in synthetic biology consists of creating a sensor for cellular stress readouts. The organism of choice is yeast and the protein that is used to study the phenomena is SNF1 which is a kinase that is activated when the cells are stressed.</td> | Our contribution to the IGEM competition in synthetic biology consists of creating a sensor for cellular stress readouts. The organism of choice is yeast and the protein that is used to study the phenomena is SNF1 which is a kinase that is activated when the cells are stressed.</td> | ||
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<td><p>The cellular stress is sensed by a key protein called AMP-activated protein kinase (AMPK). The AMPK protein complex is conserved among all eukaryotes, including yeast, plants and humans. In humans this is the target of most anti-diabetic drugs in the market today and is also implicated in many other metabolic disorders such as obesity and atherosclerosis and also in developmental processes such as cell cycle and ageing, etc. In yeast, this protein is called SNF1.</p> | <td><p>The cellular stress is sensed by a key protein called AMP-activated protein kinase (AMPK). The AMPK protein complex is conserved among all eukaryotes, including yeast, plants and humans. In humans this is the target of most anti-diabetic drugs in the market today and is also implicated in many other metabolic disorders such as obesity and atherosclerosis and also in developmental processes such as cell cycle and ageing, etc. In yeast, this protein is called SNF1.</p> | ||
<p>This protein functions as a heterotrimer consisting of α, β and γ subunits. The α-subunit contains the catalytic domain (actual kinase) while the β-subunit is the regulatory domain. It response to high levels of AMP and undergoes a conformational change, which exposes the phosphorylation site on the catalytic α-subunit. AMPK is activated by phosphorylation on this conserved site on the α-subunit (shown in the figure below).<br> | <p>This protein functions as a heterotrimer consisting of α, β and γ subunits. The α-subunit contains the catalytic domain (actual kinase) while the β-subunit is the regulatory domain. It response to high levels of AMP and undergoes a conformational change, which exposes the phosphorylation site on the catalytic α-subunit. AMPK is activated by phosphorylation on this conserved site on the α-subunit (shown in the figure below).<br> | ||
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To reach the project goal several procedures need to be performed. Firstly the most suitable positions of the fluorescent proteins need to be determined. This will be done by studying parts of the crystal structure of the protein complex. The distances between the fluorophores are measured to secure that they are optimal with respect to the intrinsic properties of the flurophore pair. After this the fusion protein genome will be synthesized through fusion PCR. The fusion protein genome is then inserted into the yeast plasmid pSGM1 with the aid of several restriction endonucelases. The plasmids will be amplified in <em>E. coli</em> after which they are sent to be sequenced to make sure that the correct insert has been created. The last step is to transform a yeast strain with the plasmids, expose the cells to different stress factors and study the FRET signal. The FRET-signal will be used to quantify the expression level of the SNF1 complex.<br> | To reach the project goal several procedures need to be performed. Firstly the most suitable positions of the fluorescent proteins need to be determined. This will be done by studying parts of the crystal structure of the protein complex. The distances between the fluorophores are measured to secure that they are optimal with respect to the intrinsic properties of the flurophore pair. After this the fusion protein genome will be synthesized through fusion PCR. The fusion protein genome is then inserted into the yeast plasmid pSGM1 with the aid of several restriction endonucelases. The plasmids will be amplified in <em>E. coli</em> after which they are sent to be sequenced to make sure that the correct insert has been created. The last step is to transform a yeast strain with the plasmids, expose the cells to different stress factors and study the FRET signal. The FRET-signal will be used to quantify the expression level of the SNF1 complex.<br> | ||
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- | <p>A secondary task is to measure the expression levels of the SNF1 complex through western blot with probes that only bind to the phosphorylated (active) protein. These levels will be compared to the expression levels derived through the FRET-analysis. Our expectation is to find a linear correlation between both measurements.</p> | + | <p>A secondary task is to measure the expression levels of the SNF1 complex through western blot with probes that only bind to the phosphorylated (active) protein. These levels will be compared to the expression levels derived through the FRET-analysis. Our expectation is to find a linear correlation between both measurements.</p></td> |
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+ | The long term ambition of this project it is to ultimately use the results in the pharmaceutical industry when performing high-throughput screening for new substances or finding the correct drug concentrations to use. The yeast cells with the modified SNF-complex can be moved through a micro-fluidic system, gradually exposing them to an array of substances or a concentration gradient and easily finding out at which concentration or substance that the cells are stressed.</p> | ||
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Latest revision as of 09:27, 20 July 2010
project description | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
More about the project | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Aim | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Our contribution to the IGEM competition in synthetic biology consists of creating a sensor for cellular stress readouts. The organism of choice is yeast and the protein that is used to study the phenomena is SNF1 which is a kinase that is activated when the cells are stressed. |
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theoretic background | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
The cellular stress is sensed by a key protein called AMP-activated protein kinase (AMPK). The AMPK protein complex is conserved among all eukaryotes, including yeast, plants and humans. In humans this is the target of most anti-diabetic drugs in the market today and is also implicated in many other metabolic disorders such as obesity and atherosclerosis and also in developmental processes such as cell cycle and ageing, etc. In yeast, this protein is called SNF1. This protein functions as a heterotrimer consisting of α, β and γ subunits. The α-subunit contains the catalytic domain (actual kinase) while the β-subunit is the regulatory domain. It response to high levels of AMP and undergoes a conformational change, which exposes the phosphorylation site on the catalytic α-subunit. AMPK is activated by phosphorylation on this conserved site on the α-subunit (shown in the figure below).
Figure 1: (1)Structure of the AMPK heterotrimer. The figure on the left shows the conformation in an inactive state. On the right, the conformational change in the γ-subunit triggers a structural change in the α-subunit, which is phosphorylated. (2) Schematic representation (stereo view) of the heterotrimer core of SNF1. The regulatory sequence of the a-subunit (Snf1) is shown in red and the rest is in yellow; theGBDof the b-subunit (Sip2) is shown in cyan and the rest is in magenta; and the c-subunit (Snf4) is shown in green. The positions of AMP (stick model in black), as observed from our studies and in the S. pombe enzyme9, as well as that of b-cyclodextrin (in grey) as bound in the rat GBD10, are shown for reference.
The conceptual idea is to use the conformational change in the Snf1 complex to establish a FRET (Förster Resonance Energy Transfer) system. There are two chromophores tagged at appropriate locations. Upon undergoing the conformational change, they come in close proximity such that the emission energy from one can excite the other, thus resulting in different emission energy. There are two possibilities to be tested. |
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method and execution | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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