Difference between revisions of "Team:Northeastern Boston/Description"
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<h1 class="page-header__title" align="left" style="border-width:0">OUR PROJECT</h1> | <h1 class="page-header__title" align="left" style="border-width:0">OUR PROJECT</h1> | ||
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+ | <p>Northeastern 2015 set out for the highest protein expression possible. The rationale for this approach was to counteract the typically low nuclear expression levels of heterologous proteins in <i>C. reinhardtii</i>. Therefore, the designed novel plasmid used <a href="http://parts.igem.org/Part:BBa_K1547005" target="_blank">pPsaD</a>, a very strong promoter. While it was possible to make all the parts, the Gibson repeatedly failed.</p> | ||
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+ | <p>We then shifted towards adaption of a plasmid from the Chlamy Collection: pOpt_mVenus. By surrounding the first promoter with the iGEM prefix and suffix, we created an iGEM compatible protein expression <a href="https://2015.igem.org/Team:Northeastern_Boston/Design" target="_blank">plasmid</a>. In this way, teams can remove the suffix and replace it with a codon-optimized coding sequence for heterologous proteins of interest, or remove the promoter region entirely, testing alternate promoters and coding sequences upstream of a hygromycin B selection cassette.</p> | ||
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+ | <p>Genetic engineering of microalgae is not new. <i>C. reinhardtii</i>, in particular, has been explored as a platform for heterologous proteins for years but to a far lesser extent than mammalian cells or higher-order plants. Although they're difficult to engineer, microalgae are poised to disrupt biofuel, agriculture, and pharmaceuticals. With their primary reliance on CO<sub>2</sub> and their capacity for producing complex proteins, microalgae like <i>C. reinhardtii</i> represent the chassis of the future.</p> | ||
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Latest revision as of 17:00, 1 October 2015