Team:ULB-Brussels/Project
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<p>2A sequences have been well characterized in eukaryotes but not in bacteria (except for the f2A peptde) [<b>7</b>]. Since these two domains of life have different ribosomal structures, 2A functionnality is still to be analysed in bacteria.</p> | <p>2A sequences have been well characterized in eukaryotes but not in bacteria (except for the f2A peptde) [<b>7</b>]. Since these two domains of life have different ribosomal structures, 2A functionnality is still to be analysed in bacteria.</p> | ||
<p>2A have an advantage over other methods to pair two proteins : it allows a powerful quality control. Indeed, the second peptide cannot be produced if the first one has been subjected to a frameshifting mutation.</p> | <p>2A have an advantage over other methods to pair two proteins : it allows a powerful quality control. Indeed, the second peptide cannot be produced if the first one has been subjected to a frameshifting mutation.</p> | ||
+ | |||
<h1>Aim</h1> | <h1>Aim</h1> | ||
<p>Mighty Coli will combine the production of a PI with an antitoxin through the use of a 2A peptide ; the antitoxin will be translated first and the toxin will be constitutively expressed by the cell [<b>Figure 5a</b>]. Should PI expression fall due to a stress, antitoxin expression would diminish too, thus killing unproductive stressed cells [<b>Figure 5b</b>]. A frameshift in the PI reading frame will often result in a translation stop and a truncated PI. In Mighty Coli, such frameshifts will abolish antitoxin translation, leading to cell death [<b>Figure 5c</b>]. The PI::2A::Antitoxin plasmid will be stabilized in the population without using antibiotics resistance genes. Should this plasmid be lost, antitoxin expression would fade from the cell and the toxin would kill plasmid-free cells. Toxin genes can be stabilized by being directly integrated into genomic DNA [<b>Figure 5d</b>].</p> | <p>Mighty Coli will combine the production of a PI with an antitoxin through the use of a 2A peptide ; the antitoxin will be translated first and the toxin will be constitutively expressed by the cell [<b>Figure 5a</b>]. Should PI expression fall due to a stress, antitoxin expression would diminish too, thus killing unproductive stressed cells [<b>Figure 5b</b>]. A frameshift in the PI reading frame will often result in a translation stop and a truncated PI. In Mighty Coli, such frameshifts will abolish antitoxin translation, leading to cell death [<b>Figure 5c</b>]. The PI::2A::Antitoxin plasmid will be stabilized in the population without using antibiotics resistance genes. Should this plasmid be lost, antitoxin expression would fade from the cell and the toxin would kill plasmid-free cells. Toxin genes can be stabilized by being directly integrated into genomic DNA [<b>Figure 5d</b>].</p> | ||
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<section style="margin: 25px"> | <section style="margin: 25px"> | ||
<br/><font size="1"><b>Figure 5</b> : Mighty Coli features. <b>a</b> : In normal conditions, PI traduction is paired with antitoxin production. Produced antitoxin is able to inhibit toxins and to ensure cell survival. <b>b</b> : Following a stress, PI and antitoxin expression might diminish, ensuring the death of unproductive cells. <b>c</b> : A frameshift in the PI will make translation of the antitoxin impossible, killing cells carrying mutated PI genes. <b>d</b> : Cells losing plasmids carrying the PI will also lose the antitoxin, leading to cell death.</font> | <br/><font size="1"><b>Figure 5</b> : Mighty Coli features. <b>a</b> : In normal conditions, PI traduction is paired with antitoxin production. Produced antitoxin is able to inhibit toxins and to ensure cell survival. <b>b</b> : Following a stress, PI and antitoxin expression might diminish, ensuring the death of unproductive cells. <b>c</b> : A frameshift in the PI will make translation of the antitoxin impossible, killing cells carrying mutated PI genes. <b>d</b> : Cells losing plasmids carrying the PI will also lose the antitoxin, leading to cell death.</font> | ||
- | <p> | + | <p> We will have several tasks to do :</p> |
+ | <ul> | ||
+ | <li>Build plasmids for bacterial systems : One with CcdB and one with GFP::2A::CcdA.</li> | ||
+ | <li>Build plasmids for yeast systems : One with Kid and one with GFP::2A::Kis.</li> | ||
+ | <li>Test the cleavage rate of 2A peptides in <i>E. coli</i>.</li> | ||
+ | <li>Test the activity of the toxins with a N-terminal proline.</li> | ||
+ | <li>Characterize the system to see whether it is functionnal and advantageous over standard production models.</li> | ||
+ | </ul> | ||
</section> | </section> | ||
<!--<p>Since the downstream protein does not necessarily begins by a prolin, we added the DNA sequence for the prolin at the end of the gene of the 2A peptide. This ensures that p2A will always be followed by a proline undependantely of the nature of the downstream protein. It is thus this construction of 2A peptide + proline that is referred to as "2A peptide" in the other sections of our project. Hence, the C-terminal extremity of the upstream protein is fused with p2A, and N-terminal extremity of the downstream protein is fused with the proline we added to the 2A peptide. <p> | <!--<p>Since the downstream protein does not necessarily begins by a prolin, we added the DNA sequence for the prolin at the end of the gene of the 2A peptide. This ensures that p2A will always be followed by a proline undependantely of the nature of the downstream protein. It is thus this construction of 2A peptide + proline that is referred to as "2A peptide" in the other sections of our project. Hence, the C-terminal extremity of the upstream protein is fused with p2A, and N-terminal extremity of the downstream protein is fused with the proline we added to the 2A peptide. <p> |
Revision as of 16:15, 12 October 2014
$~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ \newcommand{\MyColi}{{\small Mighty\hspace{0.12cm}Coli}} \newcommand{\Stabi}{\small Stabi}$ $\newcommand{\EColi}{\small E.coli} \newcommand{\SCere}{\small S.cerevisae}\\[0cm] ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ \newcommand{\PI}{\small PI}$ $\newcommand{\Igo}{\Large\mathcal{I}} \newcommand{\Tgo}{\Large\mathcal{T}} \newcommand{\Ogo}{\Large\mathcal{O}} ~$
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