Team:Wageningen UR/project/kill-switch

From 2014.igem.org

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The input/output plasmid is the plasmid with the rhamnose promoter, the CIλ repressor, CItet promoter  and the GFP  or toxins  see figure 5 and 6. It is assembled with the standard BioBrick assembly method. The end product is assembled into a low copy number plasmid to reduce the metabolic stress, enable faster reactions to input repressors, and lower the GFP production so that it can be measured more accurately, and to reduce the possibility that leakiness in toxin production will kill the cell.  Another low copy plasmid than psb3k3  can also be used.
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<figcaption> Figure 6: A schematic overview of the input output plasmid. The first light green arrow is the rhamose promoter (Prhamnose) that is activated by the presence of rhamnose in the media. The second green arrow is the tetracycline CIʎ promoter (Ptet/CI) that is repressed by the tetR repressor and the CIʎ repressor. The blue block represents the ʎCI repressor gene, and the Green block represents the GFP gene.
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<h2 id="results1">Results</h2>
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Figure 7 shows cells carrying the pSB3K3 plasmid containing the kill-switch input output plasmid (BBa_K1493560 ) that were incubated on LB agar plates containing 0.2% rhamnose and no rhamnose overnight at 37°C.
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<figcaption> Figure 7: plates with streaks of colonies with the input output plasmid in Duplo. the top plates are plates without rhamnose and the bottom plates are plates with rhamnose.
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On plates without rhamnose the construct should express GFP since the rhamnose promoter is not active so there is no repression of the promoter expressing GFP. On the plates with rhamnose colonies should not express GFP since the rhamnose promoter should be active and producing repressors that repress the promoter that produces GFP. Under UV light  the colonies on the plate with no rhamnose shows green fluorescence. The colonies induced by rhamnose don’t show a green colour.  From the picture in Figure 7 we can conclude that the production of GFP is repressed by the repressor protein CIλ.
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Since this plasmid is also used to characterize the pCI/Tet promoter (see rhamnose mediated characterization ) it also gives a first  suggestion that this method works. 
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<h2 id="toggleswitchplasmid">The Toggle Switch Plasmid</h2>
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The toggle switch is a memory system consisting out of  the pCIlac promter , TetR gene , Tet promoter  and LacI repressor , see figure 8 and 9.
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<figcaption> Figure 8: the overview of the kill switch regulatory system. The toggle switch  plasmid is circled.
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It is assembled with the standard BioBrick assembly method . The end product is assembled into a low copy number plasmid. Another low copy plasmid than psb3k3  can also be used. To test the toggle switch a GFP was added behind the <i>TetR</i> gene.
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<figcaption> Figure 9: A schematic overview of the toggle switch plasmid The light green arrows are promoters. The first promoter is the promoter repressed by the CIλ repressor and the lacI repressor (PCI/Lac). The second  green arrow is the tetracycline promoter (Ptet) that is repressed by the tetR repressor. The orange box is a representation of the tetR repressor gene. The yellow box is a representation of the LacI repressor gene.
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In the active state the promoter pTet is on expressing the lac repressor protein LacI, which binds to pCI/lac and inhibits the production of TetR, keeping it in the same state. Besides the <i>lac</i> gene, a second gene is arranged downstream of the <i>tet</i> promoter: the <i>gfp</i> gene. We expect to see high fluorescence values for the active state, since both LacI and GFP will be expressed. In the resting state  only TetR will be produced, repressing pTet, thus no GFP is expressed resulting in low fluorescence. The active state can be induced by adding the chemical anhydrotetracycline (aTc). aTc is an inhibitor of TetR, which induces the toggle switch to start expressing LacI and GFP. The resting state is induced by the chemical Isopropyl β-D-1-thiogalactopyranoside (IPTG), which is an inhibitor of LacI.
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<h2 id="results2">Results</h2>
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To determine if the toggle switch is functional and the repressor proteins produced under the promoters inhibit the gene expression of each other the system was characterized. Three cultures were prepared in M9 medium  in duplo, inoculated with <i>Escherichia coli</i> strain NEB5α carrying the toggle switch with reporter. The first containing 500 ng/ml aTc  to get the cells into the active state and the second inducing the resting state by 2 mM IPTG  as described by Gardner et al[1]. A third culture is grown without inducer, evoking a random state. <i>E. coli</i> carrying pSB3K3 with <i>CI</i> and <i>lacI</i> with no promoter was used as an auto fluorescence control. Cultures were grown overnight and fluorescence was measured the next morning using a plate reader (395 excitation, 509 emission). Cells did not grow well in M9 with 2mM IPTG, as the OD was low (OD 600 nm of 0.3) compared to OD 600nm 0.6-0.7 of the cultures grown with ATC or with no inducer, after overnight incubation.
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<figcaption> Figure 10. The relative fluorescence unit of each toggle switch state. Fluorescence is measured in duplo of cell cultures carrying the pSB3K3 plasmid with the toggle switch construct (BBa_K1493702, BBa_K1493703) grown in M9 medium containing 500 ng/ml aTc (green), 2 mM IPTG (red) and with no inducer added to the medium (blue).
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Figure 10 shows that the cultures grown in M9 with 500 ng/ml aTc have an average relative fluorescence unit of 7300. The cultures grown with 2 mM IPTG give an average fluorescence unit of 1000. The cells grown in M9 with no inducer give a fluorescence of 5200 RFU. These values indicate that the toggle switch is functional as it has a high fluorescence when grown with aTc, which means it is in its active state. The resting state is reached with low fluorescence when grown with IPTG. We can conclude from the RFU value of the cultures grown with no inducer that the culture has a mix of both states. Thus, the toggle switch is able to choose a random state and no state is significantly more preferred than the other .  This is in contrast to what the model  predicted.
Figure 10 shows that the cultures grown in M9 with 500 ng/ml aTc have an average relative fluorescence unit of 7300. The cultures grown with 2 mM IPTG give an average fluorescence unit of 1000. The cells grown in M9 with no inducer give a fluorescence of 5200 RFU. These values indicate that the toggle switch is functional as it has a high fluorescence when grown with aTc, which means it is in its active state. The resting state is reached with low fluorescence when grown with IPTG. We can conclude from the RFU value of the cultures grown with no inducer that the culture has a mix of both states. Thus, the toggle switch is able to choose a random state and no state is significantly more preferred than the other .  This is in contrast to what the model  predicted.

Revision as of 00:15, 17 October 2014

Wageningen UR iGEM 2014