Difference between revisions of "Team:Paris Bettencourt/Project/VitaminB12"
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<h2>Design/Construction</h2><br> | <h2>Design/Construction</h2><br> | ||
+ | <p> | ||
+ | The riboswitch expression cassette was originally ordered as a G block consisting of the riboswitch upstream of EGFP under control of the P(bla) promoter and ending with the rrnB terminator. Following insertion of this cassette into pSB1C3, we had no GFP expression at all, even in the absence of cobalamin. Sequencing of the cassette revealed to amino acid substitutions in the EGFP gene. </p> | ||
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+ | Rather than attempt to determine if the EGFP was non-functional due to the mutations, or due to non-function of the riboswitch, we extracted the riboswitch and inserted it into a pSB1C3 plasmid containing an mRFP1 gene (BBa_J04450) using Gibson assembly; this 213 bp sequence was cloned just upstream of the mRFP1 gene, replacing the original RBS and the START codon, leaving the Lac promoter/Lac O untouched. The Lac promoter was left because we were not sure if the riboswitch sequence did indeed contain a promoter. This novel plasmid was cotransformed in a chemically competent E. coli DH5alpha strain along with a compatible plasmid containing the Venus fluorescent protein whose expression is not regulated by B12, and act as our positive control.</p> | ||
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− | + | <div style="align: center"> | |
− | + | <img src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2015/e/ef/Ribomescouilles.png" style="width: 100%"> | |
− | <img src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2015/e/ef/Ribomescouilles.png" | + | Figure 1. Map of the riboswitch/RFP cassette. |
− | + | </div> | |
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− | Figure 1. Map of the riboswitch/RFP cassette< | + | |
The 213 sequence is the one that has been used in Xuan Zhu 2015 paper. We might have identified - using the BLAST tool from NCBI - that it was actually containing 24 bases - at the end - coding for the beginning of the CbiB protein, including the start codon (GTG), this has been a crucial information actually because it gave us the warranty that we were placing our fluorescent protein in frame with this original start codon. We might also have identified the RBS, 3 bases upstream. | The 213 sequence is the one that has been used in Xuan Zhu 2015 paper. We might have identified - using the BLAST tool from NCBI - that it was actually containing 24 bases - at the end - coding for the beginning of the CbiB protein, including the start codon (GTG), this has been a crucial information actually because it gave us the warranty that we were placing our fluorescent protein in frame with this original start codon. We might also have identified the RBS, 3 bases upstream. |
Revision as of 19:14, 16 November 2015