Difference between revisions of "Team:Bielefeld-CeBiTec/Project/HeavyMetals"

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<div id="mercury" style="display: none">
 
<div id="mercury" style="display: none">
 
<h3>Occurrence</h3>
 
<h3>Occurrence</h3>
    <p>Mercury is found in water, typically as Methylmercury, which is build out of inorganic mercury by different marine bacteria (Pseudomonas spp.) under aerobic conditions. Additional mercury(II)chloride with an high solubility, and mercury sulfide are found in water. The main natural source of Mercury exposure is trough volcanic activity (WHO 2005). Additional to the natural sources there are many kinds of emission caused by humans. For example mercury contamination can be caused by medical waste (damaged measurement instruments), Fluorescent-lamps, Chlor- Alkali plants and thermal power plants (Verma et al.2013). The natural occurring concentration of mercury in groundwater and surface water are in most cases less than 0.5 µg/L but can rise to higher concentrations by local mineral deposit. In some countries, groundwater and shallow wells show an increased mercury concentration). Due to volcanic activity, the mercury concentration in water can rise frequently up to 5.5µg/L (Izu Oshima Island in Japan)(WHO 2005). </p>  
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<p> Mercury is found in water, typically as Methylmercury, which is build out of inorganic mercury by different marine bacteria <EM>Pseudomonas spp.)</EM> under aerobic conditions. Additional mercury(II)chloride with a high solubility, and mercury sulfide are found in water. The main natural source of Mercury exposure is trough volcanic activity (WHO 2005). Additional to the natural sources there are many kinds of emission caused by humans. For example mercury contamination can be caused by medical waste (damaged measurement instruments), fluorescent-lamps, chlor- alkali plants and thermal power plants (Verma et al.2013). The natural occurring concentration of mercury in groundwater and surface water are in most cases less than 0.5 µg/L but can rise to higher concentrations by local mineral deposit. In some countries, groundwater and shallow wells show an increased mercury concentration. Due to volcanic activity, the mercury concentration in water can rise frequently up to 5.5µg/L (Izu Oshima Island in Japan) (WHO 2005).</p>  
  
 
  <h3>Health effects</h3>
 
  <h3>Health effects</h3>
    <p>In the environment, mercury is one of the most toxic elements (L.A. Rojas, 2011). Inorganic Mercury is higher concentrated in water than organic mercury. The most toxic and dangerous compounds are organometallic mercury molecules like methylmercury and dimethylmercury. These organometallic compounds are better soluble in lipids. Because of this fact it is easier to permeate the cellular membrane. Acute effects of a mercury intoxication can range from diseases of the Liver, kidney, gastrointestinal tract, Neuromuscular and neurological problems. Inorganic mercury accumulates in the kidneys and has a long biological half-time. In contrast to organic mercury, inorganic mercury is not able to cross the blood-brain barrier or blood-placenta barrier (Park et al., 2012). A chronic intoxication of mercury results in kidney changes, changes in the central nervous system and other effects like cancer (Holmes et al., 2009, WHO 2005). Studies have shown that mercury, in the form of mercury(II)chloride, binds with DNA and leads to strand breaks. Additional this studies show that mercury generates chromosomal aberrances (WHO 2005). In addition a relation between an early exposure of mercury and late initial of Alzheimer and other neurodegenerative diseases are discussed (Park et al., 2012). </p>
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<p>In the environment, mercury is one of the most toxic elements (L.A. Rojas, 2011). Inorganic mercury is higher concentrated in water than organic mercury. The most toxic and dangerous compounds are organometallic mercury molecules like methylmercury and dimethylmercury. These organometallic compounds are better soluble in lipids. Because of this fact, it is easier to permeate the cellular membrane. Acute effects of a mercury intoxication can range from diseases of the liver, kidney, gastrointestinal tract, neuromuscular and neurological problems. Inorganic mercury accumulates in the kidneys and has a long biological half-time. In contrast to organic mercury, inorganic mercury is not able to cross the blood-brain barrier or blood-placenta barrier (Park et al., 2012). A chronic intoxication of mercury results in kidney changes, changes in the central nervous system and other effects like cancer (Holmes et al., 2009, WHO 2005). Studies have shown that mercury, in the form of mercury(II)chloride, binds with DNA and leads to strand breaks. Additional studies show that mercury generates chromosomal aberrances (WHO 2005). In addition, a relation between an early exposure of mercury and late initial of Alzheimer and other neurodegenerative diseases are discussed (Park et al., 2012). </p>
  
 
  <h3>Detection</h3>
 
  <h3>Detection</h3>
     <p>In some laboratories mercury can be by atomic absorption spectrometry with a detection limit of 5µg/L and the Inductively Coupled Plasma Method with an detection level of 0.6µg/L (WHO 2005). These test systems are expensive, extensive and not suitable for fast simple testing. Additional to the named high-tech methods there are different chemical and biological test systems. One of these systems is the detection by ELISA with mercury specific Antibodies (Wylie et al. 1991). </p>
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     <p>In some laboratories mercury can be detected by atomic absorption spectrometry with a detection limit of 5µg/L and the Inductively Coupled Plasma Method with a detection level of 0.6µg/L (WHO 2005). These test systems are expensive, extensive and not suitable for fast simple testing. Additional to the named high-tech methods there are different chemical and biological test systems. One of these systems is the detection by ELISA with mercury specific Antibodies (Wylie et al. 1991). </p>
  
 
  <h3>Our mercury biosensor</h3>
 
  <h3>Our mercury biosensor</h3>
     <p>For our sensor we use parts of the mercury sensor constructed by iGEM team Peking 2010. These Parts consist of the Mer operon from shigella flexneri R100 plasmid Tn21, a mercury dependent operon. The expression of the Mer operon is regulated by the activator MerR. The MeR transcription however is regulated by itself. Mercury can bind to the C-terminal located cysteines and generates a conformal change to activate the expression (N.L. Brown et al.2003). Our mercury Sensor contains MerR, which is under control of a constituitive promoter and MerT. sfGFP protein is used as measuring output signal and it´s transcription is controlled by the 5` untranslated region. </p>  
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     <p>For our sensor, we use parts (<a href="http://parts.igem.org/Part: BBa_K346002" target="_blank"> BBa_K346002 </a> and <a href="http://parts.igem.org/Part: BBa_K346001" target="_blank"> BBa_K346001) </a>  of the mercury sensor constructed by iGEM team Peking 2010. These Parts consist of the Mer operon from <EM>Shigella flexneri</EM> R100 plasmid Tn21, a mercury dependent operon. The expression of the Mer operon is regulated by the activator MerR. The MeR transcription however is regulated by itself. Mercury can bind to the C-terminal located cysteines and generates a conformal change to activate the expression (N.L. Brown et al.2003). Our mercury Sensor contains MerR, which is under control of a constitutive promoter and specific promoter MerT. sfGFP protein is used as measuring output signal and it´s transcription is controlled by the 5` untranslated region, which enhances the following reporter protein sfGFP . </p>  
  
 
  <h3>References</h3>
 
  <h3>References</h3>

Revision as of 12:20, 16 September 2015

iGEM Bielefeld 2015


Heavy Metals

We detect several heavy metals with a single test strip.


Heavy metals have been part in a lot of iGEM projects over the last years, so why work with them again?


survey result

Heavy metals
Heavy metals are part of earth’s crust and therefore natural occurring in our environment. (Heavy Metals - Lenntech) In low doses some of them as copper or nickel are even essential trace elements for animals and humans (Rashmi Verma and Pratima Dwivedi 2013). A major problem is their bioaccumulation which leads to toxicity and long term effects which include fatal diseases as cancer (Martin et al. 2009) Parkinson or Alzheimer’s disease (Gaggelli et al. 2006).

survey result

Our biosensors
We decided to work with already existing well characterized sensors as well as working with established but not well characterized concepts of other teams and moreover created new sensor systems. Therefore we established a basic construction plan for our sensor systems which is based on a promoter with a specific operator region in front of a super folder GFP (sfGFP) that was used for detection trough fluorescence analysis. In addition to that we used fitting activators or repressors for our inducible promoters under the control of BBa_K608002 which consists of a constitutive promoter with a strong ribosomal binding site (RBS). We combined these into a device consisting of constitutive promoter and RBS reverse and the promoter and operator region in front of the sfGFP. So we have repressor or activator constitutively express but reverse, to minimize background transcription of the inducible system in front of our heavy metal promoter operator system.

survey result

Detected heavy metals
The heavy metal sensors we choose for detection are specific to arsenic, copper, chromium, lead, mercury and nickel. Which concentrations in drinking water are regulated by the WHO, because of their immediate and longtime health effects.




Our motivation
We aim to make a use of well characterized sensors as well as concepts and new ideas. All this sensor systems shell work on the same principle, so that we can use them to create a modular easy to handle paper based cell free test strip for detection of more substances, heavy metals in this case, in parallel.


Click on the test strip for more information about the heavy metals and how they can be detected:

teststrip