Team:HKU-Hong Kong/Project

From 2010.igem.org

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(The changes)
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So, now our plan has changed from making an oil digesting bacterium to a lactose digesting bacterium. After the digestion is done, the bacteria will kill themselves.
So, now our plan has changed from making an oil digesting bacterium to a lactose digesting bacterium. After the digestion is done, the bacteria will kill themselves.
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==The plasmid design==
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[[Image:Hkupdes.JPG|700px]]
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*placBAD: a promoter inducible by lactose or arabinose
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*cI: the inhibitor of the pR promoter
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*Lac I: The inhibitor of the lac operon
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*Lac Z: Beta-galactosidase
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*Lac A : lactose acetylase
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*Lac Y : lactose permease
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*pL : a promoter that can be inhibited by cI
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== Results ==
== Results ==
== Possible further research ==
== Possible further research ==

Revision as of 05:13, 20 August 2010

Abcas.jpg
Home Team Official Team Profile Project Parts Submitted to the Registry Modeling Notebook Safety

Several ideas on the subject of this year's investigation were come up during various brainstorming sessions. Our team picked out the idea of engineering a mechanism that can act as a safety net to prevent genetically modified bacteria from performing undesired tasks in wrong environments.

Bacteria are genetically engineered to perform various functions.Prospective functions include biodegradation of crude oil and killing of cancer cells. Yet, undesired tasks might be performed by the baterium itself as well. The idea of a "bio-safety" net would serve the purpose.

For example, after fulfillment of intended functions or when bacteria have escaped from the intented work zone.

Contents

Overall project

ways to achieve this

  • Insertion of killing genes
  • Regulated by specific promoters

Killingmec.JPG

  • Promoters respond to changes in the environment

Hence bacteria can and can only function well and survive in a specific environment

Project Details

Killing Mechanism

  • Enterobacteriophage T4 Lysis Device
    • We found the biobrick form Berkeley's team from iGEM 2008 a possible way to attain cell destruction.

T4mec.JPG

Uses genes from enterobacteriaphage T4 (endolysin – lysozyme, holin and antiholin). Various promoters can be installed into this device to control lysis. Antiholin has its own constitutive promoter to prevent formation of holin multimers from basal expression. When device is off, higher expression of antiholin is needed for better stability of the device.

  • Others
    • Lytic enzyme systems from bacteriophage
      • Lambda
      • phiX174
      • MS2
      • T2
    • Hybrid designer lytic enzyme

Regulation

Placement

Changes in our plan

Difficulties

  • Oil is a mixture of chemicals
  • Does not induce promoters
  • Difficult to target a specific component in oil
  • Dfficult to implement the oil degrading system into E. Coli within the time period available to our project

The changes

After identification of the difficulties, we decided to change our plan and instead of focusing on oil, we will use lactose to imitate ‘oil’. This lactose analogue can also be substituted with different subtracts with appropriate modification on the biobricks in initiating the mechanism. Lactose is used as the analogue owing to various reasons:

  • Lactose operon is widely studied
  • No reporter needed
  • Lac-Z assay
  • Optimal difficulty and achievable for 2 months’ time

So, now our plan has changed from making an oil digesting bacterium to a lactose digesting bacterium. After the digestion is done, the bacteria will kill themselves.

The plasmid design

Hkupdes.JPG

  • placBAD: a promoter inducible by lactose or arabinose
  • cI: the inhibitor of the pR promoter
  • Lac I: The inhibitor of the lac operon
  • Lac Z: Beta-galactosidase
  • Lac A : lactose acetylase
  • Lac Y : lactose permease
  • pL : a promoter that can be inhibited by cI


Results

Possible further research