Team:ULB-Brussels/Project
From 2014.igem.org
(J'ai réécrit le premier paragraphe de l'intro pour que ca ressemble plus à une intro de rapport. Je pense que ce serait bien d'uploader ici le schéma du systeme que j'ai faite dans le wetlab strucure.) |
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- | + | $\MyColi$ aims at improving the yield and the quality of protein production in bioreactors.</p> | |
- | + | Indeed, Production of recombinant proteins by microorganisms such as bacteria ($\small Escherichia$ $\small Coli$) or yeasts ($\small Saccharomyces$ $\SCere$, $\small Pichia$ $\small Pastoris$) is a key process in pharmacy (vaccines, insulin) and biotechnology (enzymes, antibodies). The tank in which the protein-producing microorganisms are grown is called a bioreactor. One can define it as a controlled environment in which a chemical reaction (in our case, protein synthesis)is catalyzed by microorganisms. | |
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<h3>Heterogeneity in bioreactors</h3> | <h3>Heterogeneity in bioreactors</h3> | ||
- | Microorganisms used to produce recombinant proteins in bioreactors are often seen as a homogeneous population. However, stressed subpopulations may appear, resulting in reduced quantity and quality of the production. Indeed,stressed cells consume nutrients and space but have a reduced productivity (Davey et al., 1996). Several factors may induce heterogeneity in a population : desynchronisation in cell cycle phases, emergence of mutants | + | Microorganisms used to produce recombinant proteins in bioreactors are often seen as a homogeneous population. However, stressed subpopulations may appear, resulting in reduced quantity and quality of the production. Indeed,stressed cells consume nutrients and space but have a reduced productivity (Davey et al., 1996). Several factors may induce heterogeneity in a population : desynchronisation in cell cycle phases, emergence of mutants or local variations in physico-chemical conditions within the reactor (Muller et al., 2010). Getting rid of these stressed subpopulations might be an effective way to increase both quality and quantity of production in bioreactors. </p> |
<h3>The Mighty Coli solution</h3> | <h3>The Mighty Coli solution</h3> | ||
- | <p> | + | <p>We figured that the underlying problem of population heterogeneity is that the microorganism do not have any interest in the production of the protein of interest (PI). They do not gain in fitness if they produce, and do not lose in fitness if they stop producing. If anything, it would rather be the opposite!</p> |
+ | We thus decided to give microorganisms some incentive to overproduce the PI by killing the bacteria that woud not produce enough, or that would enter a stressed physiological state.</p> | ||
+ | We used two genetic compounds to apply this principle and design $\MyColi$: the TA system, and the 2A peptide. | ||
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two linked genes encoding respectively for a stable toxic protein and an unstable inhibitor of this toxin. | two linked genes encoding respectively for a stable toxic protein and an unstable inhibitor of this toxin. | ||
Thus, to ensure the survival of bacteria expressing one of these toxins, the corresponding antitoxin must be continuously expressed in order to compensate its unstability. | Thus, to ensure the survival of bacteria expressing one of these toxins, the corresponding antitoxin must be continuously expressed in order to compensate its unstability. | ||
- | TA systems naturally occur in mobile genetic elements such as plasmids, and are used to maintain | + | TA systems naturally occur in mobile genetic elements such as plasmids, and are used by plasmids to maintain themselves in a microbial population. When a bacterium possessing such a plasmid divides, the generated daughter cells might not inherit a copy of the plasmid due to a stochastic partition. In this case, the antitoxin, unstable, is quickly degraded, allowing the toxin to perform its function and kill the daugther cell in a process known as $\small Post$-$\small Segregational$ $\small Killing$ (PSK) [<b>Fig. 1</b>]. This system allows a plasmid to be selected and maintained in a bacterial population even if it does not confer any advantage for the host. Therefore, TA systems can be seen as selfish entities, virtually making bacteria addicted to them (Hayes & Van Melderen, 2011).</p> |
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<center><img src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2014/a/ad/PSK.png"> | <center><img src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2014/a/ad/PSK.png"> | ||
</center> | </center> | ||
- | <br/><font size="1"><b>Figure 1 </b>$:\hspace{0.16cm}$ PSK and plasmid addiction. Cells that inherit a plasmid encoding a TA system can grow normally. As there is no system to part plasmids equivalently in daughter cells, some cells might not receive a plasmid during division. Such cells would still have toxins and antitoxins but these will not be renewed due to the loss of TA genes. Antitoxins are often unstable and quickly degraded by a protease under these conditions, leaving the toxins free and able to kill the cell, effectively eliminating cells losing plasmids that encode TA systems.</font> | + | <br/><font size="1"><b>Figure 1 </b>$:\hspace{0.16cm}$ PSK and plasmid addiction. Cells that inherit a plasmid encoding a TA system can grow normally. As there is no system to part plasmids equivalently in daughter cells, some cells might not receive a plasmid during division. Such cells would still have toxins and antitoxins in their cytosol but these will not be renewed due to the loss of TA genes. Antitoxins are often unstable and quickly degraded by a protease under these conditions, leaving the toxins free and able to kill the cell, effectively eliminating cells losing plasmids that encode TA systems.</font> |
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- | <p>TA systems can be divided into three groups, depending on the nature and mode of action of its components (Hayes & Van Melderen, 2011). We will mainly use II TAs in which both components are proteins and the antitoxin binds to the toxin, preventing it from performing its function [<b>Fig. 2</b>]. Toxin functions and structures in type II TA systems are diversified, allowing us to chose how cells will die when stressed. Two systems will be used to illustrate our project : CcdBA and Kid/Kis.</p> | + | <p>TA systems can be divided into three groups, depending on the nature and mode of action of its components (Hayes & Van Melderen, 2011). We will mainly use type II TAs in which both components are proteins and the antitoxin binds to the toxin, preventing it from performing its function [<b>Fig. 2</b>]. Toxin functions and structures in type II TA systems are diversified, allowing us to chose how cells will die when stressed. Two systems will be used to illustrate our project : CcdBA and Kid/Kis.</p> |
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Revision as of 19:54, 2 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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