Difference between revisions of "Team:Aalto-Helsinki/Project"
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<p>Our propane pathway is based on the research done by Pauli Kallio et al and Menon et al <a href="http://www.nature.com/ncomms/2014/140902/ncomms5731/full/ncomms5731.html" target="_blank">[9</a>, <a href="http://www.biotechnologyforbiofuels.com/content/8/1/61" target="_blank">10]</a>. Right after we decided our topic we got in touch with Pauli Kallio from the University of Turku. He was very excited about our project and eager to help. We were able to get Pauli’s groups plasmid maps from him and decided to use these as our starting material. As they had already tested this pathway, we could be sure that their genes were functional in E. coli.</p> | <p>Our propane pathway is based on the research done by Pauli Kallio et al and Menon et al <a href="http://www.nature.com/ncomms/2014/140902/ncomms5731/full/ncomms5731.html" target="_blank">[9</a>, <a href="http://www.biotechnologyforbiofuels.com/content/8/1/61" target="_blank">10]</a>. Right after we decided our topic we got in touch with Pauli Kallio from the University of Turku. He was very excited about our project and eager to help. We were able to get Pauli’s groups plasmid maps from him and decided to use these as our starting material. As they had already tested this pathway, we could be sure that their genes were functional in E. coli.</p> | ||
− | <p>Our chassis organism, | + | <p>Our chassis organism, <i>Escherichia coli</i> BL21 (DE3), was chosen because it’s a strain that produces the T7 promoter when induced with IPTG. This is the strain that was used in Kallio’s research and was available at our lab. In addition to the regular BL21 (DE3), Pauli was kind to send us a BL21(DE3) with YjgB and YqhD knocked out when we realized that producing some knock outs ourselves would be too expensive and time consuming. YjgB and YghD are E. coli’s endogenous genes which produce butyraldehyde consuming enzymes. This means that they compete with our pathway’s final enzyme, ADO, which uses butyraldehyde as its substrate.</p> |
<p>We had been warned about the pathway’s vulnerabilities: it consisted of 10 different enzymes and in earlier research it had been built with a minimum of three different plasmids. The stress for the bacteria was high. We thought that one way of reducing this stress was to use just two plasmids for the propane pathway. We then moved forward to design our complete constructs. We used Pauli’s group’s construct as a basis, and arranged the genes similarly. The arrangement of our first plasmid is the same as the original one. It starts with a T7 promoter and an additional lac operator. The T7 polymerase is IPTG inducible in our BL21 (DE3) strain, but we wanted to make sure there were no leaks in our system before the actual induction. That’s why the promoters adjacent to the genes are induced by IPTG. Following the promoter, we have the YciA, sfp and CAR each with their own rbs and a T7 terminator. We chose to use the same RBS's and terminator sequences as Pauli Kallio's group, as they had already tested the system. Our constructs terminator sequence is used in common cloning vectors (such as pET and pDF). Our second plasmid includes the same promoter, rbs’s, and terminator, but the genes AtoB, hbd, crt and ter, which is a similar construct as the original one made by Kallio's group. We decided to add another promoter to the plasmid to create two operon systems. We did this to ensure that all the genes would be transcribed by the polymerase. The last genes in our second construct, ADO, petF and fpr were arranged quite randomly and function under the same promoter and induction systems as all the other genes.</p> | <p>We had been warned about the pathway’s vulnerabilities: it consisted of 10 different enzymes and in earlier research it had been built with a minimum of three different plasmids. The stress for the bacteria was high. We thought that one way of reducing this stress was to use just two plasmids for the propane pathway. We then moved forward to design our complete constructs. We used Pauli’s group’s construct as a basis, and arranged the genes similarly. The arrangement of our first plasmid is the same as the original one. It starts with a T7 promoter and an additional lac operator. The T7 polymerase is IPTG inducible in our BL21 (DE3) strain, but we wanted to make sure there were no leaks in our system before the actual induction. That’s why the promoters adjacent to the genes are induced by IPTG. Following the promoter, we have the YciA, sfp and CAR each with their own rbs and a T7 terminator. We chose to use the same RBS's and terminator sequences as Pauli Kallio's group, as they had already tested the system. Our constructs terminator sequence is used in common cloning vectors (such as pET and pDF). Our second plasmid includes the same promoter, rbs’s, and terminator, but the genes AtoB, hbd, crt and ter, which is a similar construct as the original one made by Kallio's group. We decided to add another promoter to the plasmid to create two operon systems. We did this to ensure that all the genes would be transcribed by the polymerase. The last genes in our second construct, ADO, petF and fpr were arranged quite randomly and function under the same promoter and induction systems as all the other genes.</p> | ||
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<h2 id="cellulose">Degrading Cellulose</h2> | <h2 id="cellulose">Degrading Cellulose</h2> | ||
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+ | <p>To further develop the idea of using propane as a biofuel, feedstock alternatives were sought as glucose itself interferes with food production. At first, we planned to use cyanobacteria as a host organism to produce carbohydrates to the propane pathway but with the current time interval the project would become too challenging to be accomplished. However, non edible carbon sources like cellulose were already investigated by previous iGEM-teams and cellulose hydrolysis by bacteria wasn’t connected to the propane pathway yet. Therefore, we decided to create an application that could use the utilization of cellulosic waste in order to generate a more ethical life cycle for our biofuel, which could be easily integrated into the original plan.</p> | ||
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+ | <figure style="float:right"> | ||
+ | <img src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2015/e/eb/Aalto-Helsinki_Restriction.png" style="width:200px;"/> | ||
+ | <figcaption></figcaption> | ||
+ | </figure> | ||
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+ | <p>Because we wanted to create the abilities of degrading cellulose and producing propane into the same strain, genes expressing cellulases needed to be in the same backbone. Two plasmids already contained propane pathway genes and the approximated limit of the insert size in the plasmid is about 10 kb. The number of different degrading enzymes was limited to three cellulases in order to limit the plasmid size and the stress of the organism. To convert cellulose polymers into glucose units, the proper hydrolysis requires enzymes endoglucanase, exoglucanase and β-glucosidase. Endoglucanases hydrolyze covalent bonds from the middle of polysaccharide and exoglucanases cleave oligosaccharides from the ends of the chain. β-glucosidases convert oligosaccharides into glucose which are utilized for metabolic reactions.</p> | ||
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+ | <p>Usually, fungal strains <i>Trichoderma reesei</i> and <i>Saccharomyces cerevisiae</i> produces two different types of endoglucanases and exoglucanases belonging to different enzyme families. Due to our enzyme limit, only Type I cellulases (CenA, accession M15823 and Cex, accession M15824) from <i>Cellulomonas firmi</i> were chosen to be expressed. We found only a couple of Biobricks which could be used for our project from the iGEM registry but those parts had complicated status. Fortunately, the sequences were available on the registry for parts <a href=”http://parts.igem.org/wiki/index.php?title=Part:BBa_K392006”>BBa_K392006</a> and <a href=”http://parts.igem.org/wiki/index.php?title=Part:BBa_K392007”>BBa_K392007</a> and Distribution Kit 2015 contained the gene responsible for β-glucosidase <a href=”http://parts.igem.org/Part:BBa_K118028”>BBa_K118028</a> from <i>Cytophaga hutchinsonii</i>. Therefore, we decided to synthesize endoglucanase and exoglucanase expressing genes utilizing the sequences previously mentioned and take β-glucosidase from the kit. These three sequences will be amplified with PCR and connected with the homology ends of genes created by primers. The connections will also be made with Gibson Assembly method. The cellulase genes are positioned downstream to the same T7 promoter induced by IPTG.</p> | ||
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+ | <p><i>E.coli</i> strains do not naturally contain any secretion systems for endoglucanases and exoglucanases so if the bacteria has previously been researched for cellulose degradation, usually the enzymes are separated from cytoplasm with overflow. However, B21-strain which we were using naturally contained β-glucosidase gene in the genome but because the expression levels and enzyme activities were poorly documented in databases, we decided to add the gene Osaka team were using. For cenA and cex secretion, pelB-secretion tag sequence <a href=”http://parts.igem.org/Part:BBa_J32015”>BBa_J32015</a> made by 2010 Duke team was synthesized before the genes to be fused with the cellulases which would be moved into cell’s periplasmic space.</p> | ||
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+ | <p>Cellulase producing capacity will be first investigated with carboxymethyl cellulose (CMC) plates which are labeled with Congo Red assay. Congo red dye is the sodium salt of 3,3'-([1,1'-biphenyl]-4,4'-diyl)bis(4-aminonaphthalene-1-sulfonic acid) which has a strong affinity to cellulose fibers. If the cellulose polymers are digested by enzymes on the plate, the spot will be changed into colorless and a halo will appear around the bacterial colony. However, the method will not tell whether the glucose is produced or not.</p> | ||
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+ | <p>For glucose analysis, 3,5-dinitrosalicylic acid will be utilized. It is a compound which reacts with reductive sugars like glucose forming 3-amino-5-nitrosalicylic acid. The product absorbs light with the wavelength of 540 nm. Three different controls are needed when analyzing the produced glucose concentration because the cultivation liquid with CMC already contains sugar: one without any strain, one with E.coli without cellulase producing capacity and one with cellulose hydrolyzing.</p> | ||
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</section> | </section> | ||
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<!-- Continuous production --> | <!-- Continuous production --> | ||
<section id="cont" data-anchor="cont"> | <section id="cont" data-anchor="cont"> | ||
− | <h2 id="cont">Continuous Production</h2> | + | <h2 id="cont" style="clear:both">Continuous Production</h2> |
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+ | <p>The project is based on the research made by Turku University <a href="http://www.nature.com/ncomms/2014/140902/ncomms5731/full/ncomms5731.html" target="_blank">[9</a>] and they sent us their <i>E.coli</i> strain BL21 (DE3 ΔyjgB ΔyqhD, pET-TPC4 + pCDF-cAD + pACYC-Fdx-Fpr) which produces propane with the reaction pathway utilizing the intermediates of fatty acid biosynthesis and enzymes like FASII and Tes4. From the butyrate towards reaction pathway’s enzymes are similar to our reactions. The strain has already been cultivated as a bench scale using an Erlenmeyer flask. The authors of this research proposed that the propane producing capacity could be also tested with continuous production where the cells are grown until the steady state is achieved. The steady state will be maintained with the regular feed of fresh media into a chemostat while the outline will continuously remove the same amount of media with products. Thus, the growth rate can be readily controlled by changing the diluting speed of media.</p> | ||
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+ | <p>Because the strain BL21 (DE3 ΔyjgB ΔyqhD, pET-TPC4 + pCDF-cAD + pACYC-Fdx-Fpr) produces propane only by inducing with IPTG instead of constitutive production, certain limitations are met when designing the chemostat conditions. Cultivating microbes with a maximum capacity would consume too much IPTG which is quite valuable reagent as a diluting rate needs to be high. Therefore, the chemostat will be used for investigating how the environmental conditions affect to the product formation. The easiest way is to wait until the steady state without any induction and add after that IPTG. Because the process conditions are changed, OD600 is measured all the time.</p> | ||
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+ | <p>The overall media volume of chemostat will be 500 ml due to the limit of the IPTG amount. The steady state is approximated to take time 10h but it may vary radically. Diluting rate is kept to 0,5 1/h and glucose feed 10 g/L. When OD600 reaches its balance, the IPTG concentration for media is increased to 0,5 mM. Induction will take another 10 hr so the overall process time will be probably few days. Gas products will be measured with GC-MS analysator which will be connected with the outlet stream of the chemostat. Because the reactor size is limited (2 L), only few sensors can be attached to the same unit. Probably we are going to measure the cell density and pH-levels.</p> | ||
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</section> | </section> |
Revision as of 08:18, 19 August 2015