Team:Toulouse/Project/Overview

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<div class="Title">Overview: Save our trees with SubtiTree !</div>  
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<div class="Title"> Let's save our trees with SubtiTree !</div>  
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        Canker is one of the important infection caused by fungi and particularly affecting plane trees (Platanus sp.). Plane trees are widely present in Southern France and participated to the site gorgeousness. Today, the only treatment consists in preventive tree-cutting which has a huge cost and implies significant ecological troubles. Facing this emergency, our team offers an innovation alternative originated from synthetic biology.  
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Among many other things, Southern France is well-known for the gorgeousness of its landscapes. Plane trees (Platanus sp.) are widely present and participate to the charm of this area, especially along the famous “Canal du Midi”. It is impossible to imagine this UNESCO World Heritage masterpiece without its trees. Unfortunately, these trees are threatened by a severe fungal infection called canker, and today the only treatment consists in preventive tree-cutting which has a huge cost and implies significant ecological troubles.  
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Facing this emergency, the students from the iGEM team of Toulouse decided to be committed to the protection of their local heritage. Indeed, using a bacterium vector naturally present in the trees, our team offers an alternative solution originated from synthetic biology. Thanks to different genetic modules, the engineered bacterium called SubtiTree is first able to head towards the pathogen, then to bind to its cell wall in order to finally deliver different fungicides to save the tree from its invaders. Taking into account the ecological and ethical matters, our team thinks about how to limit the spreading of the optimized microorganism through different strategies.
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Although our project was born from a local problematic, it is transposable to other tree vascular diseases.
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        Indeed, the aim of our project is to design an entophytic bacterium able to detect and target the pathogen in order to deliver different fungicides to save the tree from its invaders. This project limits the spreading of our engineered bacterium in the environment by considering ecological and ethical matters.
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         First, the bacterium targets the fungi thanks to a chimiotactism module recognizing the soluble chitin monomers (N-acetyl-glucosamine).
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         First, the bacterium targets the pathogen thanks to a chimiotactism module which recognizes the soluble chitin monomers (N-acetyl-glucosamine) released by the fungi.
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         Our team worked on different aspects to keep control on SubtiTree. The aim is to prevent horizontal transfers between different bacteria and to contain the engineered bacterium inside the tree during one season.  
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Latest revision as of 11:51, 12 September 2014

header background










Let's save our trees with SubtiTree !



Among many other things, Southern France is well-known for the gorgeousness of its landscapes. Plane trees (Platanus sp.) are widely present and participate to the charm of this area, especially along the famous “Canal du Midi”. It is impossible to imagine this UNESCO World Heritage masterpiece without its trees. Unfortunately, these trees are threatened by a severe fungal infection called canker, and today the only treatment consists in preventive tree-cutting which has a huge cost and implies significant ecological troubles.

Facing this emergency, the students from the iGEM team of Toulouse decided to be committed to the protection of their local heritage. Indeed, using a bacterium vector naturally present in the trees, our team offers an alternative solution originated from synthetic biology. Thanks to different genetic modules, the engineered bacterium called SubtiTree is first able to head towards the pathogen, then to bind to its cell wall in order to finally deliver different fungicides to save the tree from its invaders. Taking into account the ecological and ethical matters, our team thinks about how to limit the spreading of the optimized microorganism through different strategies. Although our project was born from a local problematic, it is transposable to other tree vascular diseases.


Chimiotactism Show more

First, the bacterium targets the pathogen thanks to a chimiotactism module which recognizes the soluble chitin monomers (N-acetyl-glucosamine) released by the fungi.


chimiotactism
Fixation Show more

Then, SubtiTree binds onto the pathogen by a chimeric protein anchored on one side to the bacterium pepdidoglycan and on the other side to the fungal chitin-based wall.

Biding
Fungicides Show more

To finish, our designed bacterium fights against the pathogen by setting up a powerful treatment based on the production of three different fungicides.

Fungicides
Spreading Show more

Our team worked on different aspects to keep control on SubtiTree. The aim is to prevent horizontal transfers between different bacteria and to contain the engineered bacterium inside the tree during one season.

Spreading