Team:Oxford/biopolymer containment
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<h1>Introduction</h1> | <h1>Introduction</h1> | ||
- | The ‘Realisation’ sections of our project aim to bridge the gap between laboratory research and industrial application by the development of novel methodology widely applicable to synthetic biology. We designed and synthesised bacteria-containing biopolymeric beads to increase DCM turnover, while serving simultaneously to limit local substrate concentration to within our strain's viable range. <br> | + | |
+ | The ‘Realisation’ sections of our project aim to bridge the gap between laboratory research and industrial application by the development of novel methodology widely applicable to synthetic biology. We designed and synthesised bacteria-containing biopolymeric beads to increase DCM turnover, while serving simultaneously to limit local substrate concentration to within our strain's viable range. <br><br> | ||
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+ | This has particular value in industry; it can be imagined, for example, that structurally complex natural products such as morphine, pacitaxel, or oxazolomycins could be cheaply synthesised by exploiting existing biological machinery. As biological reactions are generally very slow, this is a common limitation to financial viability of such applications, which this project aims to improve. | ||
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<img src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2014/d/d0/Oxigembeadynth4.jpg" style="float:left;position:relative; width:50%;margin-left:25%;margin-right:25%;margin-bottom:2%;" /><br><br> | <img src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2014/d/d0/Oxigembeadynth4.jpg" style="float:left;position:relative; width:50%;margin-left:25%;margin-right:25%;margin-bottom:2%;" /><br><br> | ||
As of the wiki freeze, we had yet to perform polymer coating of bacteria-containing agarose beads, although have made arrangements within the Oxford's Biochemistry department to further research this, to be written as a scientific paper.<br><br> | As of the wiki freeze, we had yet to perform polymer coating of bacteria-containing agarose beads, although have made arrangements within the Oxford's Biochemistry department to further research this, to be written as a scientific paper.<br><br> | ||
- | By collecting the resulting 'capsules' and repeating this procedure, polymer coat thicknesses were built up to 5mm, calculated by the difference in measured initial and final diameters (an average of 5 diameters, using 0.01 mm precision callipers). Polymer thicknesses are taken only to the nearest mm, reflecting the large uncertainty in thickness due to non-uniformity of both the 'bead' and 'capsules', and the polymer | + | By collecting the resulting 'capsules' and repeating this procedure, polymer coat thicknesses were built up to 5mm, calculated by the difference in measured initial and final diameters (an average of 5 diameters, using 0.01 mm precision callipers). Polymer thicknesses are taken only to the nearest mm, reflecting the large uncertainty in thickness due to non-uniformity of both the 'bead' and 'capsules', and additionally non-uniformity of the polymer density. <br><br> |
<img src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2014/d/da/Oxford_polymer4.png" style="float:left;position:relative; width:50%;margin-left:25%;margin-right:25%;margin-bottom:2%;" /> | <img src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2014/d/da/Oxford_polymer4.png" style="float:left;position:relative; width:50%;margin-left:25%;margin-right:25%;margin-bottom:2%;" /> | ||
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- | The volatility and poor visible absorption of DCM posed a challenge in reliably measuring rates of diffusion | + | The volatility and poor visible absorption of DCM posed a challenge in reliably measuring rates of diffusion through the polymer. We decided, instead, to base our modelling on the diffusion of indigo dye from within prepared beads, collecting the following spectrophotometric absorption data (calibrated to prepared concentration standards): |
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<img src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2014/0/08/Oxford_Leroy_table3.png" style="float:left;position:relative; width:80%;margin-left:10%;margin-right:10%;margin-bottom:2%;" /> | <img src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2014/0/08/Oxford_Leroy_table3.png" style="float:left;position:relative; width:80%;margin-left:10%;margin-right:10%;margin-bottom:2%;" /> | ||
- | + | Though these results is approximate, and intend to provide only an estimate of the diffusion kinetics, they demonstrate that the polymer coating is indeed diffusion limiting due two simultaneous effects. Firstly, the rate at which the system reaches equilibrium concentration i.e. defined by the variable k which is itself a function of bead surface area, polymer diffusivity and coating thickness, is reduced in each of the systems. Furthermore, the maximum concentration reachable at the equilibrium point is itself a function of the thickness of the coating and decreases as the polymer thickness increases. | |
</div> | </div> |
Latest revision as of 03:51, 18 October 2014