Difference between revisions of "Team:UMaryland/Description"

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<p style="font-size:18px">How does this lead to plasmid maintenance? Hok mRNA, due to a high degree of secondary structure, has a long half-life, measured at 20 minutes. Sok, on the other hand, has a half-life of only 30 seconds. The cell must thus retain the coding region for Sok in order to produce enough Sok to continue blocking Hok translation. If the plasmid is lost, then both the Hok and Sok coding regions will be lost; however, previously transcribed Hok mRNA will still be present. With previously transcribed Sok rapidly degrading, Hok mRNA will be translated, killing the daughter cell that did not maintain the plasmid.</p>
 
<p style="font-size:18px">How does this lead to plasmid maintenance? Hok mRNA, due to a high degree of secondary structure, has a long half-life, measured at 20 minutes. Sok, on the other hand, has a half-life of only 30 seconds. The cell must thus retain the coding region for Sok in order to produce enough Sok to continue blocking Hok translation. If the plasmid is lost, then both the Hok and Sok coding regions will be lost; however, previously transcribed Hok mRNA will still be present. With previously transcribed Sok rapidly degrading, Hok mRNA will be translated, killing the daughter cell that did not maintain the plasmid.</p>
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<p style = "font-size:18px">Our wet project for 2015 was to demonstrate that the Hok-Sok system could maintain a plasmid over many generations as well as typical antibiotic maintenance systems. We hypothesized that the Hok-Sok system could thus serve as a cheap, ethical alternative to antibiotic pressure.</p>
  
 
<a href="https://2015.igem.org/Team:UMaryland/Design">
 
<a href="https://2015.igem.org/Team:UMaryland/Design">

Revision as of 05:50, 15 September 2015