Team:Hannover/Project

From 2014.igem.org

(Difference between revisions)
Line 1: Line 1:
<!-- *** What falls between these lines is the Alert Box!  You can remove it from your pages once you have read and understood the alert *** -->
<!-- *** What falls between these lines is the Alert Box!  You can remove it from your pages once you have read and understood the alert *** -->
-
 
{{Template:Team:Hannover/igem.css}}
{{Template:Team:Hannover/igem.css}}
{{Template:Team:Hannover/main.css}}
{{Template:Team:Hannover/main.css}}
{{Template:Team:Hannover/main.tmpl}}
{{Template:Team:Hannover/main.tmpl}}
-
 
<html>
<html>
<body>
<body>

Revision as of 21:06, 31 August 2014

Project description

Heavy metals – topical and ubiquitous

In today’s world, heavy metals are the indispensable basis for the technical progress of our society. They allow us to refine raw materials to improve the infrastructure (copper, zinc), keep us mobile (copper, zinc) and ensure energy is always available from rechargeable batteries (cadmium) and in the form of electricity (copper). The mining industry has grown considerably and the mining of heavy metals has increased dramatically since the Industrial Revolution in the 19th century. This is down to the increase in global demand as well as to new extraction technologies. But what is the real price we have to pay for heavy metals?

In nature, heavy metal ions are usually found in complex compounds. The process of mining for gold, lead or copper brings these ions together with large quantities of their poisonous ligands, arsenic, for example, to the surface, where they are temporarily stored on slag heaps. Heavy metals are released by corrosion and the extremely high wear and tear suffered by products containing heavy metals (especially in the electronics and automotive industry). They are also mobilized by weathering processes, and then transported from the slag heaps at the mines into our groundwater. From there they get into our drinking water and via agricultural processes they indirectly get into our food chain. Heavy metals can accumulate in the tissues in the body and even very low concentrations can severely harm our health by causing organ failure, infertility or neuronal degeneration. The heavy metal load is a global problem. Although the heavy metal load in newly industrialized countries such as China or Bangladesh is much higher than in Germany, there are many possible applications for our project at home as well. Brake wear and tire abrasion release large quantities of zinc and copper onto German roads every day. The rain washes these heavy metals onto the grass verges and water retention basins adjoining the ‘autobahns’ or they enter the surrounding lakes and rivers via the municipal sewerage systems.

Old routes – new ideas

Since 2007, 17 teams from 8 different countries have already chosen the problem of heavy metals in our environment as their topic. A total of 13 medals have been awarded in this subject area. This shows how relevant and highly topical the subject is. While other teams have concentrated more on detection and quantification, we want to go one step further with our concept of plant-based water and soil decontamination. We want to equip plants with a protein which binds several heavy metals at the same time and hence brings about a significant reduction in the heavy metal concentration. We thus hope to achieve more extensive binding of hazardous heavy metals than that achieved by conventional methods.

Our path to finding a solution

1. step: Transformation of Plants 2. step: Secretion and Immobilising 3. step: Quantitative Analysis

Our goal is to produce a Top4 Metal Binding Protein (T4-MBP) which attaches itself to the cellulose of the plants and binds four heavy metals of global relevance. We intend to use naturally occurring metallothioneins - proteins whose specific amino acid sequences alone make them able to form complexes with heavy metals. We have decided on the following heavy metals or domains and combined them to our first synthesis construct on the basis of the cDNA sequences:

The aim is to be able to use the protein in terrestrial (Arabidopsis thaliana) as well as aquatic plants (Wolffia). Since no-one has had much experience with the transformation of Wolffia, we decided to demonstrate the principle initially in the model organisms A. thaliana and Nicotiana tabacum. Our genetic construct is ultimately to be brought into the target organism with the aid of a transformation by Rhizobium radiobacter (formerly Agrobacterium tumefaciens).