Difference between revisions of "Team:UMaryland/Description"
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− | <p style="font-size:20px">How does this process 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. | + | <p style="font-size:20px">How does this process lead to plasmid maintenance? Hok mRNA, due to a high degree of secondary structure, has a long half-life, measured at 20 minutes, or approximately the time of one growth cycle. Sok, on the other hand, has a half-life of only 30 seconds. Thus in order to continue suppressing hok translation, the cell must retain the sok gene, and consequently the plasmid, through cell division if it is to constantly produce enough sok to continue inhibiting hok translation. If the plasmid is "lost", or not passed down to the daughter cell, then both the Hok and Sok coding regions will be lost. However, due to its long half-life, previously transcribed Hok mRNA will remain in the cell while previously transcribed sok rapidly degrades. No longer silenced, hok mRNA will be then translated, killing the daughter cell that did not maintain the plasmid. In nature, this is how the Hok-Sok system maintains antibiotic resistance in <i>E. coli</i> in the absence of antibiotic pressure.</p> |
− | <p style = "font-size:20px">Our wet lab project for 2015 was to demonstrate that the Hok-Sok system could maintain a plasmid over many generations | + | <p style = "font-size:20px">Our wet lab project for 2015 was to demonstrate that the Hok-Sok system could maintain a recombinant plasmid containing BioBricks over many generations of bacterial division. We also wanted to compare the effectiveness of Hok-Sok to traditional antibiotic maintenance systems. We thus hypothesized that the Hok-Sok system could thus serve as an ethical alternative to antibiotic pressure.</p> |
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Revision as of 18:49, 18 September 2015