Difference between revisions of "Team:Oxford/Experiments"
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<h2 style="text-align:left">Introduction</h2> | <h2 style="text-align:left">Introduction</h2> | ||
+ | <p> | ||
+ | Our enzymatic approach to the treatment of urinary tract infections (UTIs) is centred on the design of a "pathogen killing" engineered microbial host containing three key features: | ||
+ | <ul> | ||
+ | <li>Constant secretion of biofilm-degrading enzymes - degrading the biofilms of the pathogenic bacteria reduces their resistance towards antibiotics</li> | ||
+ | <li>Production and intracellular accumulation of enzymes that can kill both the pathogenic bacteria and our engineered microbial host upon release into the extracellular medium</li> | ||
+ | <li>A quorum sensing mechanism that triggers the release of the antibacterial enzymes in the presence of pathogenic bacteria</li> | ||
+ | </ul> | ||
+ | </p> | ||
+ | <p> | ||
+ | Through our experimental work with secretion assays, biofilm assays, and cell-killing assays we were able to obtain preliminary data suggesting that the <a href="https://2015.igem.org/Team:Oxford/Parts">BioBrick parts</a> which we designed to allow our microbial host to produce the relevant biofilm-degrading enzymes and bacteria-killing enzymes are indeed able to function as expected individually. | ||
+ | </p> | ||
+ | |||
</div> | </div> |
Revision as of 02:23, 10 November 2015
Experiments
Introduction
Our enzymatic approach to the treatment of urinary tract infections (UTIs) is centred on the design of a "pathogen killing" engineered microbial host containing three key features:
- Constant secretion of biofilm-degrading enzymes - degrading the biofilms of the pathogenic bacteria reduces their resistance towards antibiotics
- Production and intracellular accumulation of enzymes that can kill both the pathogenic bacteria and our engineered microbial host upon release into the extracellular medium
- A quorum sensing mechanism that triggers the release of the antibacterial enzymes in the presence of pathogenic bacteria
Through our experimental work with secretion assays, biofilm assays, and cell-killing assays we were able to obtain preliminary data suggesting that the BioBrick parts which we designed to allow our microbial host to produce the relevant biofilm-degrading enzymes and bacteria-killing enzymes are indeed able to function as expected individually.