Team:Oxford/alternatives to microcompartments
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<h1>Introduction: collaboration with the Melbourne team and their star peptide</h1> | <h1>Introduction: collaboration with the Melbourne team and their star peptide</h1> | ||
- | The degradation pathway of DCM by DcmA produces a number of intermediates. | + | The degradation pathway of DCM by DcmA produces a number of intermediates. Some of these, such as formaldehyde, are suspected to be toxic to our host bacteria above certain concentrations. Alongside using microcompartments for our project, we have also collaborated with UniMelb iGEM and considered attaching our different enzymes to the arms of a star peptide <a href="https://2014.igem.org/Team:Melbourne"> |
(link to Melbourne wiki here)</a> . In doing so, this increases the likelihood of our intermediates, produced by one enzymatic reaction, interacting with the next enzyme in the reaction pathway thereby limiting their accumulation. | (link to Melbourne wiki here)</a> . In doing so, this increases the likelihood of our intermediates, produced by one enzymatic reaction, interacting with the next enzyme in the reaction pathway thereby limiting their accumulation. | ||
Revision as of 20:02, 30 September 2014
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