Difference between revisions of "Team:Glasgow/Project/Overview/RBS"
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Once we have assembled <i>luxA</i> and <i>luxB</i> together with a pBAD promoter upstream, we wanted to determine if the construct allows cells to respond to the decanal in the environment. In addition to that, we also aimed to screen the RBS library in the construct as RBS of different strengths should cause variability in bioluminescence intensity between colonies. To start, we grew transformed cells on the L-agar with 1% arabinose and then exposed them to the 5% decanal solution. Several 10μl drops of solution were applied on the lid of the Petri dish and the lids were then immediately placed on the plates with cells and kept for a few minutes. Lids were then taken off and plates were photographed in the dark room with the 30s exposure at the ISO 64000. | Once we have assembled <i>luxA</i> and <i>luxB</i> together with a pBAD promoter upstream, we wanted to determine if the construct allows cells to respond to the decanal in the environment. In addition to that, we also aimed to screen the RBS library in the construct as RBS of different strengths should cause variability in bioluminescence intensity between colonies. To start, we grew transformed cells on the L-agar with 1% arabinose and then exposed them to the 5% decanal solution. Several 10μl drops of solution were applied on the lid of the Petri dish and the lids were then immediately placed on the plates with cells and kept for a few minutes. Lids were then taken off and plates were photographed in the dark room with the 30s exposure at the ISO 64000. | ||
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As seen in the FigureX, colonies that grew on the plate containing arabinose (ara+) show bioluminescence activity in the dark while control plate with no arabinose (ara-) does not contain any bioluminescent colonies. More importantly, in the ara+ plate we observe that, for a human eye, colonies vary in bioluminescence intensity from very bright to absolutely blank colonies. Therefore, here we show that <i>E. coli</i> is able to uptake decanal from the environment and produce light when the expression of <i>luxAB</i> is turned on. Moreover, we demonstrate that some of the RBS arrangements in the pBAD.<i>luxAB</i> construct are more efficient than others in terms of stimulating translation initiation. | As seen in the FigureX, colonies that grew on the plate containing arabinose (ara+) show bioluminescence activity in the dark while control plate with no arabinose (ara-) does not contain any bioluminescent colonies. More importantly, in the ara+ plate we observe that, for a human eye, colonies vary in bioluminescence intensity from very bright to absolutely blank colonies. Therefore, here we show that <i>E. coli</i> is able to uptake decanal from the environment and produce light when the expression of <i>luxAB</i> is turned on. Moreover, we demonstrate that some of the RBS arrangements in the pBAD.<i>luxAB</i> construct are more efficient than others in terms of stimulating translation initiation. |
Revision as of 18:10, 16 September 2015
RBS library
Summary
Aim
To optimise bioluminescence in Escherichia coli by creating a range of Ribosome Binding Sites (RBS) for each of the six genes in the luxCDABEG operon from Aliivibrio fisheri, originally submitted to the registry as a single BioBrick (K325909) in 2010 by the Cambridge team.
Results
- Designed RBS library with 32 variants for each lux gene - Made luxABG and luxCDE constructs from the RBS library – over 1000 RBS variantions for each construct - Showed that cells are able to uptake decanal from the environment and produce light when luxAB or luxABG is expressed - Visualised RBS library for luxAB, luxABG and luxCDE constructs and determined optimal RBS arrangements for E. coli
Biobricks
Documented and submitted:
- BBa_K1725340: I0500-RBS-luxA-RBS-luxB-RBS-luxG
- BBa_K1725341: I0500-RBS-luxA-RBS-luxB-RBS-luxG-K1725080-RBS-luxC-RBS-luxD-RBS-luxE
- BBa_K1725301-BBa_K1725332: RBS library
- BBa_K1725342: K1725080-RBS-luxC-RBS-luxD-RBS-luxE (High decanal production)
- BBa_K1725343: K1725080-RBS-luxC-RBS-luxD-RBS-luxE (Low decanal production)
Motivation
For the Bioluminescence part of our project we used the luxCDABEG operon from A. fischeri introduced to the iGEM by Cambridge team in 2010. Five lux genes are known to be essential for the bioluminescence production: luxA and luxB encoding bacterial luciferase and luxC, luxD and luxE encoding enzyme complex that synthesises tetradecanal, a substrate for the luciferase. Sixth gene, luxG encodes a flavin reductase that provides reduced flavin mononucleotide for the bioluminescence reaction resulting in an enhanced light ouptput. Initially we decided to optimise bioluminescence in E. coli by rearranging whole Lux operon and placing a defined relatively-weak (REF) ribosome binding site – B0032 – upstream of each of the six lux genes, as described on our Bioluminescence page. Taking this approach further, we thought of adjusting bioluminescence in E. coli by creating a B0032-derived Ribosome Binding Site library for each lux gene. The idea behind this was to create a range of RBS combinations in a lux operon and therefore, generate E. coli strains of different bioluminescence intensity. We assumed that the most favourable RBS arrangements in lux operon should be observed in the E. coli colonies emitting the most light.
Design
For the construction of the RBS library, we used a master sequence based on the RBS B0032 (Figure 1). 4 nucleotides within the actual ribosome binding site were randomised giving 32 different B0032-derived RBS variants. The predicted efficiency of each RBS library member was estimated using RBS Library Calculator (ref: http://msb.embopress.org/content/10/6/731) for every lux gene. Theoretically, with 32 different RBS variants for each of the six lux genes, final RBS library for lux operon would have over a billion different RBS arrangements.Strategy and approaches
Randomised PCR and Cloning, Cloning, Cloning
Testing pBAD.luxAB
Inviting Mr. Bright to the party: luxG
Story about luxCDE
Results
- Cell-cell comunication - Decanal experiments - Spectrum experiments and comparison to Cambridge operonReferences