Team:ULB-Brussels/Project
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<p class="title"><font color="#002B9B"> | <p class="title"><font color="#002B9B"> | ||
- | An introduction to | + | An introduction to Mighty Coli |
</font></p> | </font></p> | ||
</td></tr> | </td></tr> | ||
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<h3><font color="#000050"> The Mighty Coli insight </font></h3> | <h3><font color="#000050"> The Mighty Coli insight </font></h3> | ||
- | <p>We thought that the underlying problem of population heterogeneity is that micro-organisms do not have any advantage to produce a protein of interest (PI). Such production would be a unnecessary constraint for the cell, </p> | + | <p>We thought that the underlying problem of population heterogeneity is that micro-organisms do not have any advantage to produce a <i>protein of interest</i> (PI). Such production would be a unnecessary constraint for the cell, </p> |
We thus decided to give microorganisms some incentive to overproduce the PI. That would be done by killing the non-productive bacteria, or that would enter a stressed physiological state.</p> | We thus decided to give microorganisms some incentive to overproduce the PI. That would be done by killing the non-productive bacteria, or that would enter a stressed physiological state.</p> | ||
We used two genetic compounds to apply this principle and design Migthy Coli : the toxin-antitoxin systems (TA) and the 2A peptides. | We used two genetic compounds to apply this principle and design Migthy Coli : the toxin-antitoxin systems (TA) and the 2A peptides. | ||
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<p>TA systems are operons made of | <p>TA systems are operons made of | ||
- | two linked genes encoding respectively for a stable toxic protein and an unstable inhibitor of this toxin : an antitoxin. TA systems naturally occur in mobile genetic elements such as plasmids and are used to maintain these 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 post-segregational killing (PSK) [<b>Fig. | + | two linked genes encoding respectively for a stable toxic protein and an unstable inhibitor of this toxin : an antitoxin. TA systems naturally occur in mobile genetic elements such as plasmids and are used to maintain these 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 <i>post-segregational killing</i> (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 [3].</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"> | ||
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- | <p>TA systems can be divided into three groups, depending on the nature and mode of action of its components [3]. 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. | + | <p>TA systems can be divided into three groups, depending on the nature and mode of action of its components [3]. 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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<h3><font color="#000050"> CcdBA and the DNA gyrase </font></h3> | <h3><font color="#000050"> CcdBA and the DNA gyrase </font></h3> | ||
- | CcdBA is the most studied type II TA system, an operon coming from the <i>E. coli</i> fertility factor (F plasmid). CcdB is the toxin and CcdA the antitoxin. CcdB is an inhibitor of the DNA gyrase, an enzyme that negatively supercoils circular DNA, such as bacterial chromosomes and plasmids. In the majority of the organism, the DNA is negatively supercoiled, but during transcription or replication, DNA gets positively supercoiled due to ADN/ARN polymerase activity. The role of gyrase is to reduce the linking number of the DNA by relaxing positive supercoiled DNA. CcdB associates with the DNA gyrase subunit that binds to DNA and inhibits its activity when it is bound to DNA, resulting in DNA double strand breaks due to the progession of polymerases during replication or transcription <b>[Fig. | + | CcdBA is the most studied type II TA system, an operon coming from the <i>E. coli</i> fertility factor (F plasmid). CcdB is the toxin and CcdA the antitoxin. CcdB is an inhibitor of the DNA gyrase, an enzyme that negatively supercoils circular DNA, such as bacterial chromosomes and plasmids. In the majority of the organism, the DNA is negatively supercoiled, but during transcription or replication, DNA gets positively supercoiled due to ADN/ARN polymerase activity. The role of gyrase is to reduce the linking number of the DNA by relaxing positive supercoiled DNA. CcdB associates with the DNA gyrase subunit that binds to DNA and inhibits its activity when it is bound to DNA, resulting in DNA double strand breaks due to the progession of polymerases during replication or transcription <b>[Fig. 3]</b>. It causes the activation of emergency signals and possibly death of the cell [4]. |
</p> | </p> | ||
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<section style="text-align: justify; margin: 50px"> | <section style="text-align: justify; margin: 50px"> | ||
<h2>Stability of Mighty Coli</h2> | <h2>Stability of Mighty Coli</h2> | ||
- | The regulation of natural TA system can be complex, and is not always well understood. Since we want our system to be as simple, as safe and as productive as possible, we decided to use well characterized promoters for our system. We thus decided to synthetize first the toxin and the antitoxin from different plasmids, each under the control of a different promoter and each bearing a different antibiotic resistance gene. The TA system is thus used to boost protein production and the plasmid stability is assured by antibiotic resistance.<p> | + | The regulation of natural TA system can be complex, and is not always well understood. Since we want our system to be as simple, as safe and as productive as possible, we decided to use well characterized promoters for our system. We thus decided to synthetize first the toxin and the antitoxin from different plasmids <b>[Fig 5]</b>, each under the control of a different promoter and each bearing a different antibiotic resistance gene. The TA system is thus used to boost protein production and the plasmid stability is assured by antibiotic resistance.<p> |
<center><img src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2014/a/a0/ULB-Brussels_pBAD-T7-vectors.png"> | <center><img src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2014/a/a0/ULB-Brussels_pBAD-T7-vectors.png"> | ||
</center> | </center> |
Revision as of 22:38, 11 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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